Electronic/World Wide Web>Internet Article:  Priest, Graham (5/5/2014), Beyond true and false, Retrieved on 2014-08-09
  • Source Material [aeon.co]
  • Folksonomies: mathematics buddhism

    Memes

    09 AUG 2014

     König’s paradox: Ordinals

    Let’s start by turning back the clock. It is India in the fifth century BCE, the age of the historical Buddha, and a rather peculiar principle of reasoning appears to be in general use. This principle is called the catuskoti, meaning ‘four corners’. It insists that there are four possibilities regarding any statement: it might be true (and true only), false (and false only), both true and false, or neither true nor false. [...] To get back to something that the Buddha might recognise,...
    Folksonomies: mathematics paradox
    Folksonomies: mathematics paradox
      1  notes

    Also Betrand Russel's "Set of All Sets that Do Not Contain Themselves"

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