Living a false delusion

"This statement is false." That's a classic logical paradox to consider, but it's much weirder to imagine someone living it. Over at the always-illuminating Mind Hacks, Vaughan excerpts a story about a man who had that very experience, as retold by psychiatrist/philosopher Bill Fulford in the book Philosophical Psychopathology. From the book excerpt:

(The patient) had tried to kill himself because he was afraid he was going to be "locked up". However, this fear was secondary to a paranoid system at the heart of which was the hypochondriacal delusion that he was "mentally ill".

He was seen by the duty psychiatrist and by the consultant psychiatrist on call, neither of whom were in any doubt that he was deluded. Indeed, both were ready on the strength of their diagnosis to admit him as an involuntary patient.

Yet had their diagnosis depended on the falsity of the patient's belief, as in the standard definition, they would have been presented with a paradox: if the patient's belief that he was mentally ill was false, then (by the standard definition) he could have been deluded, but this would have made his belief true after all.

Equally, if his belief was true, then he was not deluded (by the standard definition), but this would have made his belief false after all. By the standard definition of delusion, then, his belief, is false, was true and, if true, was false.

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