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's self-flowing flask fills itself in this diagram, but Perpetual Motion Machines cannot exist.]] A paradox is an apparently True Statement or group of statements that leads to a contradiction or a situation which defies Intuition . Typically, either the statements in question do not really imply the contradiction, the puzzling result is not really a contradiction, or the Premises themselves are not all really true or cannot all be true together. The recognition of Ambiguities , Equivocation s, and unstated Assumption s underlying known paradoxes has led to significant advances in Science , Philosophy and Mathematics . The word ''paradox'' is often used interchangeably and wrongly with ''contradiction''; but where a contradiction by definition cannot be true, many paradoxes do allow for resolution, though many remain unresolved or only contentiously resolved, such as Curry's Paradox . Still more casually, the term is sometimes used for situations that are merely surprising, albeit in a distinctly "logical" manner, such as the Birthday Paradox . This is also the usage in Economics , where a paradox is an unintuitive outcome of economic theory. EXAMPLES Sometimes Supernatural or Science Fiction themes are held to be impossible on the grounds that they result in paradoxes. The theme of Time Travel has generated a whole family of popular paradoxes, supposed to arise from a person's interference with the past. Suppose Jones, who was born in 1950, travels back in time to 1900 and kills his own grandfather. It follows that neither his father nor he himself will be born; but then he would not have existed to travel back in time and kill his own grandfather; but then his grandfather would not have died and Jones himself ''would'' have lived; etc. This is known as the Grandfather Paradox . Paradoxes that arise from apparently intelligible uses of language are often of interest to , which shows that the notion of ''the set of all those sets that do not contain themselves'' leads to a contradiction, was instrumental in the development of modern logic and Set Theory . For more examples see List Of Paradoxes . ETYMOLOGY The Etymology of ''paradox'' can be traced back the use of the word ''paradoxo'', used in Plato's '' Parmenides '' by the Greek philosopher Zeno Of Elea , who lived at 490-430 BC. The word was used to describe seminal philosophic ideas posited by Zeno, known as Zeno's paradoxes, which exerted a poignant effect on Greek thinkers that has survived to modern day. Zeno sought to illustrate that equal absurdities followed logically from the denial of Parmenides' views. There were apparently 40 ‘paradoxes of plurality’ and other paradoxes that Zeno used to attack the Greek understanding of the physical world. In fact, Zeno's paradoxes of Multiplicity and Motion revealed some problems in space and time that cannot be resolved without the mathematical methods discovered in the 19th Century and perhaps beyond. Although it is unknown if Zeno coined the word, he can certainly be attributed as popularizing it. It is unknown if incarnations of ''paradox'' were used before Zeno of Elea. Later and more frequent usage of the word has been traced to the early Renaissance . Early forms of the word appeared in the late Latin ''paradoxum'' and the related Greek παράδοξος ''paradoxos'' meaning 'contrary to expectation', 'incredible'. The word is composed of the Preposition ''para'' which means "against" conjoined to the noun stem ''doxa'', meaning "belief". Compare Orthodox (literally, "straight teaching") and Heterodox (literally, "different teaching"). The Liar Paradox and other paradoxes were studied in Medieval Times under the heading '' Insolubilia ''. COMMON THEMES Common themes in paradoxes include direct and indirect Self-reference , Infinity , Circular Definitions , and confusion of levels of Reasoning . Paradoxes which are not based on a hidden error generally happen at the fringes of Context or Language , and require extending the context or language to lose their paradox quality. In . Another example is the conflict between an injunction not to Steal and one to care for a family that you cannot afford to feed without stolen money. TYPES OF PARADOXES W. V. Quine (1962) distinguished between three classes of paradoxes.
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