It’s difficult to assign probability to incoherent statements, because since we can’t mean anything by them, we can’t assert a referent to the statement—in that sense, the probability is indeterminate (additionally, one could easily imagine a language in which a statement such as “the green is either” has a perfectly coherent meaning—and we can’t say that’s not what we meant, since we didn’t mean anything). Recall also that each probability zero statement implies a probability one statement by its denial and vice versa, so one is equally capable of imagining them, if in a contrived way.
It’s difficult to assign probability to incoherent statements, because since we can’t mean anything by them, we can’t assert a referent to the statement—in that sense, the probability is indeterminate (additionally, one could easily imagine a language in which a statement such as “the green is either” has a perfectly coherent meaning—and we can’t say that’s not what we meant, since we didn’t mean anything). Recall also that each probability zero statement implies a probability one statement by its denial and vice versa, so one is equally capable of imagining them, if in a contrived way.