So he means first define the term "God". And then ask if the the statement "God exists" falsifiable?
If that's the case then possible all non-nouns are meaningless as we can't ask "Is it possible to falsify the existence of "if" or "and" etc?"
Yes, they are by their very definition meaningless as the basis for the question "Does "if", "or", "and" exist?". IOW, and presumably a more precise wording: The question is meaningless in view of the given definition of the terms in question.
That´s what I am trying to tell you since my first post: Whether a definition of a term is sufficiently or insufficiently defined (or even renders the discussion of a certain question meaningless/absurd) depends on the purpose of the conversation.
Well, I guess you would have to ask them.But if the rule only applies to nouns, then I am still not sure. I remember hearing about the medieval myth of dog headed people (dog heads). According to some traditions IIRC they had human bodies and dog's heads and lived in far away lands. There was even a monk who enquired as to whether they had souls. But one important characteristic IIRC (in certain versions of the myth at least) was that they could never be seen, as they were always behind the observer or some such trick. The point is that renders the question of their existence unfalsifiable, as there could never be a exploratory test proving they are not here not there. Yet, I feel that if such unfalsifiability rendered the concept "dog head" meaningless, then how did people menage to debate them, believe in them etc, including the monk who asked whether they had immortal souls?
I´ve even seen people debate the question "What´s seen in a mirror when nobody looks into it?" to great length. Or "Is redness red?"
Presumably because many people naturally work from the misconception that when a sentence/question is grammatically correct and contains possibly meaningful terms it therefore must be meaningful.
The funny thing about the dog head thing is: The very fact that actually would point to their non-existence (i.e. that there can´t be evidence for their existence) can even be taken as a confirmation of their existence: See, I´ve told you they can´t be seen, and - alas - you don´t see them. Qed." As soon as a dog head would show up the existence of dog heads (in the given definition) would be disproven.
Know the story about the guy who´s clapping his hands every some 10 seconds? "Hey, why are you doing that?" - "It drives the elephants away." - "But there are no elephants." - "See!"
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