The philosophical problem has always been he apparent arbitrariness of the rules. You can say that “meaningful”
sentences are empircially verifiable ones. But why should anyone believe that? The sentence “the only meaningful
sentences are the empircially verifiable ones” isn’t obviously empirically verifiable. You have over-valued clarity and under-valued plausibility.
They need to be meaningful. If your definition of meaningfullness assers its own meaninglessness, you have a problem. If you are asserting that there is truth-by-stipulation as well as truth-by-correspondence, you have a problem.
The philosophical problem has always been he apparent arbitrariness of the rules. You can say that “meaningful” sentences are empircially verifiable ones. But why should anyone believe that? The sentence “the only meaningful sentences are the empircially verifiable ones” isn’t obviously empirically verifiable. You have over-valued clarity and under-valued plausibility.
Definitions don’t need to be empirically verifiable. How could they be?
They need to be meaningful. If your definition of meaningfullness assers its own meaninglessness, you have a problem. If you are asserting that there is truth-by-stipulation as well as truth-by-correspondence, you have a problem.
Clarity cannot be over-valued; plausibility, however, can be under-valued.
If you believe that, I have two units of clarity to sell you, for ten billion dollars.
Before posting, you should have spent a year thinking up ways to make that comment clearer.