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by Noseshine
3617 days ago
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So once again I try to interpret OP: I think it's clear that this is a paradox in the field of logic - but only there. Few people not trained and/or thinking of "logic" (that math thing) will find this sentence paradoxical, more like "useless/meaningless". Normal people use paradox more for things like the "French paradox" (the French are health despite eating "unhealthily"). Which isn't a paradox in any logical sense, and even on a human level I myself see the paradox more in the fact that some people see a paradox at all instead of just admitting that what they think is true about nutritional science just isn't (that French phenomenon can be shown to be true in statistics, it's not just imagination). |
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Maybe. Certainly, common use (and traditional use, e.g. Zeno's Paradox) include things that are not strictly a logical paradox. But I think that most people (and certainly overwhelmingly most programmers) consider "this sentence is false" to be a paradox - which is part of why I picked it as a point of reference.