I think I have to go back and repeat that the meaning of a word cannot be true or false but merely more or less useful in relation to a goal ( and there are many different goals to choose from. )godelian wrote: ↑Sun Oct 20, 2024 4:26 am The reason why modern logic rejects your view, is because it is simply unsustainable. No formal system can function in the way that you propose. Such system would be utterly unusable if it tried. That is why a proposition is defined in modern logic as a "formal syntactic object", while every syntactically valid sentence of the designated form is a proposition in the formal language.
In other words, there is no "true" meaning of the word "unicorn". The word can mean anything you want it to mean. The question is merely: it is useful given what you want to achieve? We can talk about the true meaning of a word in a given language, e.g. the true meaning of the word "unicorn" in standard English. That is true. But otherwise, the word has no "true" meaning.
Moreover, you can always coin a neologism instead of taking an existing term and redefining it. The latter is what these systems of logic are doing. They are redefining terms. They are taking established terms such as "proposition" and "truth value" and changing their meaning to suit their purposes. That sort of thing is dangerous because it can, and it obviously does, lead to equivocation. Neologisms make it difficult to equivocate.
And finally, when evaluating the truth value of a statement, the only meanings that matter are the ones assigned to the words of that statement by the author of that statement. You have to understand the language the author is speaking in before you can understand what he is saying ( which is a prerequisite for evaluating the truth value of what he's saying. ) If you don't do that, you will necessarily end up misinterpreting him. And if you misinterpret him, you won't be evaluating the truth value of what he's saying.
If I say "Dogs are cats", you are not free to simply interpret that statement using standard English language. Perhaps that's not the language I am speaking. Perhaps I am speaking a variation of it where the word "dog" means the same thing as the word "cat". It's your duty as a reader to figure that out. Simply using whatever language you wish is not an option.
And in the case of LEM, the term "proposition" means "an idea that a portion of reality is such and such".