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(2015) Synthese 192 (11).

Two paradoxes of semantic information

Thomas Macaulay Ferguson

pp. 3719-3730

Yehoshua Bar-Hillel and Rudolph Carnap’s classical theory of semantic information entails the counterintuitive feature that inconsistent statements convey maximal information. Theories preserving Bar-Hillel and Carnap’s modal intuitions while imposing a veridicality requirement on which statements convey information—such as the theories of Fred Dretske or Luciano Floridi—avoid this commitment, as inconsistent statements are deemed not information-conveying by fiat. This paper produces a pair of paradoxical statements that such “veridical-modal” theories must evaluate as both conveying and not conveying information, although Bar-Hillel and Carnap’s theory accommodates these statements without inconsistency. Moreover, the paradoxes are independently interesting as the mode in which they self-refer bears on their evaluation.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-015-0717-1

Full citation:

Macaulay Ferguson, T. (2015). Two paradoxes of semantic information. Synthese 192 (11), pp. 3719-3730.

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