Revision 918647514 of "Meaningless statement" on enwiki

{{box|meaningless rhetoric|the literary use|Nonsense verse}}
{{reference|date=December 2009}}

A '''meaningless statement''' posits nothing of substance with which one could agree or disagree. In the context of [[logical argument]]s, the inclusion of a meaningless statement in the premises will undermine the validity of the argument since that premise can neither be true nor false.

There are many classes of meaningless statement:

* A statement may be considered meaningless if it asserts that two categories are disjoint without proposing a criterion to distinguish between them. For example, the claim, "I wouldn't know how [[pornography]] differs from [[erotica]]" is a [[distinction without a difference]].
* A statement may be meaningless if its terms are undefined, or if it contains unbound variables. For instance, the sentence "All ''X'' have ''Y''" is meaningless unless the terms ''X'' and ''Y'' are defined (or bound).
* A grammatically correct sentence may be meaningless if it ascribes properties to particulars which admit of no such properties. For example, the famous sentence "[[Colorless green ideas sleep furiously]]" cannot be taken literally.
* An ungrammatical sentence admits of no meaning. For instance, the string of words "deities Olympus Greek reside The. upon" offers no information regarding the Greek deities, or their whereabouts.
* [[Lewis Carroll]]'s poem [[Jabberwocky]] is a famous example of the [[nonsense verse|nonsensical as literature]].

==See also==
* [[Non sequitur (logic)]]
* [[Nonsense]]

{{DEFAULTSORT:Meaningless Statement}}
[[Category:Arguments]]
[[Category:Statements]]
[[Category:Meaning (philosophy of language)]]
[[Category:Nonsense]]