Moore's paradox
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G. E. Moore famously noted that saying ‘I went to the movies, but I don't believe it’ is absurd, while saying ‘I went to the movies, but he doesn't believe it’ is not in the least absurd. The problem is to explain this fact without supposing that the semantic contribution of ‘believes’ changes across first-person and third-person uses, and without making the absurdity out to be merely pragmatic. We offer a new solution to the paradox. Our solution is that the truth conditions of any moorean utterance contradict its accuracy conditions. Thus we diagnose a contradiction in how the moorean utterance represents things as being; so we can do justice to the intuition that a Moore-paradoxical utterance is in some way senseless, even if we know what proposition it expresses.
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[3] Johnny N. Williams. Moore's Paradox and Self-Knowledge , 2004 .
[4] Jane Heal,et al. Moore's Paradox: A Wittgensteinian Approach , 1994 .
[5] A. Koller,et al. Speech Acts: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language , 1969 .