(November 17, 2016 at 3:25 pm)Alasdair Ham Wrote:Quote:Dialetheism is the view that there are dialetheias. One can define a contradiction as a couple of sentences, one of which is the negation of the other, or as a conjunction of such sentences. Therefore, dialetheism amounts to the claim that there are true contradictions.
This is an example of the fallacy of equivocation.
A statement can't be simultaneously true and false, if you think otherwise you're equivocating.
Source:
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/dialetheism/
That's not what equivocation means and you're confusing your laws of thought here. This -would- be a violation of the law of non-contradiction(NC), if anything, not of the one of identity (ID).