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Paradox

simple:Paradox

See Borland Paradox for the database management tool.

A paradox is an apparently true statement that seems to lead to a logical self-contradiction, or to a situation that contradicts common intuition. The identification of a paradox based on seemingly simple and reasonable concepts has often led to significant advances in science, philosophy and mathematics.

In moral philosophy, paradox plays a particularly central role in debates on ethics. For instance, an ethical admonition to "love thy neighbour" is in (not just contrast but) contradiction with an armed neighbour actively trying to kill you: if he or she succeeds, then, you will not be able to love them. But to preemptively attack them or restrain them is not usually understood as very loving. This might be termed an ethical dilemma; another example is the conflict between an injunction not to steal and one to care for a family that you cannot afford to feed except with stolen money.

Table of contents
1 Types of paradox
2 List of paradoxes
3 Links and references

Types of paradox

Common themes in paradoxes include direct and indirect self-reference, infinity, circular definitions, and confusion of levels of reasoning.

Not all paradoxes are equal. For example, the Birthday paradox is more of a surprise than a paradox, while the resolution of Curry's paradox is still a matter of contention.

W. V. Quine [1] distinguished three classes of paradox.

List of paradoxes

Not all paradoxes fit neatly into one category. Some paradoxes include:

Veridical paradoxes

These are unintuitive results of correct logical reasoning.

Mathematical/Logical

Psychological/Philosophical

Physical

Falsidical paradoxes

These are incorrect results of subtly false reasoning.

Antinomies

Paradoxes that show flaws in accepted reasoning, axioms, or definitions. Note that many of these are special cases, or adaptations, of the Russell's paradox.

Antinomies of definition

These paradoxes rest simply on an ambiguous definition.

Conditional paradoxes

These are paradoxes only if certain special assumptions are made. Some of these show that those assumptions are false or incomplete, others are other types of paradoxes.

Other paradoxes

Links and references

References

See also

External links





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