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Latest comment: 9 months ago by Equinox in topic 1991 citation

RFV discussion: September 2016–March 2017

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PlanetStar (talkcontribs). Secrets of the Paradox: Solving the Liar and other logical problems (2013) seems to have a perfectly good citation, but I see nothing else. The name of a band and the title of a poem, and after that, not English or not for 'tralse' but a scanno. Renard Migrant (talk) 00:00, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply

Three questionable cites added. DTLHS (talk) 00:32, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply
The first one is the band name I referred to, and the second one I found also but wasn't sure what meaning it supported if any. Renard Migrant (talk) 10:41, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply
I have added another cite. Kiwima (talk) 18:36, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply
I don't see the sense of "neither t/f" in any of the citactions listed, and at first glance, I wouldn't expect tralse to mean anything but "true AND false". Can we change the definition to simply that ? Leasnam (talk) 19:30, 15 September 2016 (UTC)Reply
RFV-passed once redefined to "both true and false". - -sche (discuss) 04:50, 18 March 2017 (UTC)Reply


1991 citation

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In that citation, it actually means "true before time t and false thereafter" (evidently based on the more famous philosophical grue: green and blue at different times). So not really the same definition. Equinox 01:37, 11 March 2024 (UTC)Reply