On Thursday 23 October 2008 04:10:14 pm Elliott Hird wrote: > * FLOYD, appropriate if the statement was logically capable > of being described as either true or false with equal accuracy Accuracy may be equally "not much" (.01==.01). Probably better to say something like: * FLOYD, appropriate if the statement logically could have been consistently described as either true or false
which I think is what this is trying to get at, the concept of logical tautology. > * UNDETERMINED, appropriate if the statement is nonsensical > or too vague, or if the information available to the judge is > insufficient to determine which of the TRUE, FALSE, and UNDECIDABLE > judgements is appropriate; however, uncertainty as to how to > interpret or apply the rules cannot constitute insufficiency of > information for this purpose "which of the TRUE, FALSE, UNDECIDABLE, and FLOYD judgements" Pavitra