🔗 Colorless green ideas sleep furiously
🔗 Philosophy
🔗 Philosophy/Logic
🔗 Linguistics
🔗 Philosophy/Philosophy of language
🔗 Linguistics/Philosophy of language
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously is a sentence composed by Noam Chomsky in his 1957 book Syntactic Structures as an example of a sentence that is grammatically correct, but semantically nonsensical. The sentence was originally used in his 1955 thesis The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory and in his 1956 paper "Three Models for the Description of Language". Although the sentence is grammatically correct, no obvious understandable meaning can be derived from it, and thus it demonstrates the distinction between syntax and semantics. As an example of a category mistake, it was used to show the inadequacy of certain probabilistic models of grammar, and the need for more structured models.
Discussed on
- "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously" | 2021-02-06 | 15 Upvotes 18 Comments