Sorites Paradox
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Description: By Dominic Hyde.
Sorites Paradox (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) First published Fri Jan 17, 1997; substantive revision Tue Dec 6, 2011 The sorites paradox is the name given to a class of paradoxical arguments, also known as little-by-little arguments, which arise as a result of the indeterminacy surrounding limits of application of the predicates involved. For example, the concept of a heap appears to lack sharp boundaries and, as a consequence of the subsequent indeterminacy surrounding the extension of the predicate ‘is a heap’, no one grain of wheat can be identified as making the difference between being a heap and not being a heap. Given then that one grain of wheat does not make a heap, it would seem to follow that two do not, thus three do not, and so on. In the end it would appear that no amount of wheat can make a heap. We are faced with paradox since from apparently true premises by seemingly uncontroversial reasoning we arrive at an apparently false conclusion.
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Date | activated: 04-Oct-1985 last updated: 07-May-2009 expires: 31-Jul-2014 |