Volume 12, Issue 2, June 2023
William Bondi Knowles
Pages 105-112
https://doi.org/10.5840/tht202552243
Malfunctionalism and the Liar
Two Recalcitrant Paradoxes
A common assessment of Liar sentences is that they malfunction and fail to say what they appear to say. The purpose of this article is to highlight a couple of limitations of this ¡°malfunctionalism¡±, to which end two recalcitrant paradoxes will be presented. The first shows that there are Liar paradoxes where malfunctionalism must concede that there is no way of stating what is apparently the case. The second is the Yablo-style infinite sequence Liar, which is out of malfunctionalism¡¯s reach altogether and in need of a different solution.