Paradox: Difference between revisions

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* if a single grain of millet (a seed) makes no sound upon falling, yet 1,000 grains that fall do make a sound, how can 1,000 nothings create a sound?
* if a single grain of millet (a seed) makes no sound upon falling, yet 1,000 grains that fall do make a sound, how can 1,000 nothings create a sound?


=== Science & technology paradoxes ===
== Science & technology paradoxes ==


==== Information paradox ====
=== Information paradox ===


== Visual paradoxes ==
== Visual paradoxes ==
>> Escher to do
>> Escher to do


== List of paradoxes in other articles here ==  
== List of paradoxes in other articles here ==
 
* If life is unfair for everybody, wouldn't that make it fair?
** (w/ thanks to Henry)
*
 
* >> to do : list/ links
* >> to do : list/ links
* also from : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paradoxes
* also from : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paradoxes

Revision as of 20:21, 5 March 2022

Paradox

Paradox: when you can't have it both ways...
  • etymology:
    • from Greek paradoxon for "contrary opinion
      • para = prior
      • dox = opinion
  • definition:
    • a conflicting or self-contradictory opinion or situation
    • creates an absurdity, a puzzle or something unlikely
    • = a problem that
      • has no solution
      • the solution is never-ending
      • or the solution yields an outcome that negates the original problem

Paradox uses[edit | edit source]

  • paradoxes are logically "invalid" or "invalid arguments"
    • since they can't be solved
    • like an irrational number that goes on forever
  • however, paradoxes are useful thought experiments

Famous paradoxes[edit | edit source]

Buridan's bridge paradox[edit | edit source]

  • Plato: "If your next statement is true, I will allow you to cross the bridge. If your next statement is false, I will throw you in the water"
  • Socrates: "You will throw me in the water."

Free Will paradox[edit | edit source]

  • if God knows what will happen to us, how can contradict it?
    • and if we cannot contradict it, there is no free will

Irresistible force paradox[edit | edit source]

  • when an unstoppable force hits an immovable object

Government Temporary Powers paradox[edit | edit source]

  • nothing lasts longer than a "temporary" government power or program

Omnipotence paradox[edit | edit source]

  • if God is omnipotent (all powerful), can He make a rock so big He can't move it?

Plato's Beard paradox[edit | edit source]

Problem of Evil paradox[edit | edit source]

  • if God is good, then how can evil exist?

Russell's paradox[edit | edit source]

  • "a list of all lists that do not contain themselves"

Ship of Theseus[edit | edit source]

  • if a ship were, over time, repaired so much that every part was replaced, would it be the same ship it was originally?

Zeno's paradoxes[edit | edit source]

Dichotomy paradox[edit | edit source]

  • if you keep walking half-way to somewhere, you will never get there

Achilles and the tortoise paradox[edit | edit source]

  • "In a race, the quickest runner can never over­take the slowest, since the pursuer must first reach the point whence the pursued started, so that the slower must always hold a lead.
    • as recounted by Aristotle, Physics VI:9, 239b15

click EXPAND for explanation from Wikipedia entry: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno%27s_paradoxes#Paradoxes_of_motion

Paradox of the grain of millet[edit | edit source]

* if a single grain of millet (a seed) makes no sound upon falling, yet 1,000 grains that fall do make a sound, how can 1,000 nothings create a sound?

Science & technology paradoxes[edit | edit source]

Information paradox[edit | edit source]

Visual paradoxes[edit | edit source]

>> Escher to do

List of paradoxes in other articles here[edit | edit source]

* If life is unfair for everybody, wouldn't that make it fair? ** (w/ thanks to Henry) * * >> to do : list/ links * also from : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paradoxes