honestrosewater said:
Are the following definitions correct?
A statement S is
meaningless if its solution set is empty.
S is
undecidable if its solution set contains contradictory solutions.
I am having problems understanding those terms. If someone can give me a
precise explanation, I would appreciate it.
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Sorry, momentary lapse of judgment. This isn't really the appropriate forum.
I get the impression you were originally asking this question in an informal context. You'll need to specify what kind of "meaningless" you are referring to. A statement is said to be
factually meaningless if the truth value of that statement cannot be determined in principle. Take, for instance, the statement "blok is greener than wolt." Because we don't know what the words "blok" and "wolt" refer to, there is no way to assign a truth value to this statement. Put into logical terms, this statement is not a proposition, and so no propositional calculus can be applied to any argument containing this statement. Such an argument would not be a truth-functional argument. Of course, that statement is also grammatically meaningless because it contains words that don't exist.
However, there is no need to use an example that contains made-up words. Take the statement "I am 24." This statement is also factually meaningless if taken out of context, because we do not know what the word "I" refers to. If it's referring to me, then it is true. But if you make the statement, it might not be. This statement can also not be part of a truth-functional argument, unless it is prefaced by another statement that made explicit who the word "I" is referring to. Any statement whose truth value is thus indeterminable is factually meaningless, even though clearly the latter statement has a grammatical meaning, whereas the former does not.
There is also another way in which a statement can be factually meaningless. Take the statement "Aristotle is more of a female than Socrates." Even though we know what every word refers to, and all of the words are real words, there is still no way to evaluate the truth value of this statement, simply because neither Aristotle nor Socrates is female, and neither can be more or less female than the other. You might simply contend that the statement is false, but according to the rules of logic, the negation of any false statement is true, and clearly the statement "Aristotle is less female than Socrates" is not true.
I don't know how to answer the questions you asked initially, because as Matt pointed out, statements don't have solution sets, so their solution sets can be neither empty nor can they contain contradictions.