A name for the view that the law of contradiction can on occasion and within certain limits be violated without irrationality; ‘…the view that some contradictions are true, or that some things are both true and false’.
Also see: paraconsistency
Source:
G Priest, ‘Contradiction, Belief and Rationality’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society (1985-86) p.99
Table of Contents
- 1 Videos
- 2 Related Products
- 2.1 Graham Priest on Dialetheism and Paraconsistency (Outstanding Contributions to Logic)
- 2.2 Dialetheism and its Applications (Trends in Logic)
- 2.3 Dialetheism
- 2.4 Logics and Falsifications: A New Perspective on Constructivist Semantics (Trends in Logic)
- 2.5 Ultralogic as Universal?: The Sylvan Jungle - Volume 4 (Synthese Library)
- 2.6 Logic from Kant to Russell: Laying the Foundations for Analytic Philosophy (Routledge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Philosophy Book 19)
- 2.7 So Much Less Than Nothing
- 2.8 EMBEDDED CONTRADICTION: An Issuance of dissonance into contemporary philosophy. An introduction to Modular Truth
- 2.9 The Metaphysics of Paradox: Jainism, Absolute Relativity, and Religious Pluralism (Explorations in Indic Traditions: Theological, Ethical, and Philosophical)
- 2.10 I Am What I Am Not
Last update 2020-06-17. Price and product availability may change.