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A Brief History of the Paradox: Philosophy and the Labyrinths of the Mind

A Brief History of the Paradox: Philosophy and the Labyrinths of the Mind

Can God create a stone too heavy for him to lift? Can time have a beginning? Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Riddles, paradoxes, conundrums--for millennia the human mind has found such knotty logical problems both perplexing and irresistible.

Now Roy Sorensen offers the first narrative history of paradoxes, a fascinating and eye-opening account that extends from the ancient Greeks, through the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and into the twentieth century. When Augustine asked what God was doing before He made the world, he was told: "Preparing hell for people who ask questions like that." A Brief History of the Paradox takes a close look at "questions like that" and the philosophers who have asked them, beginning with the folk riddles that inspired Anaximander to erect the first metaphysical system and ending with such thinkers as Lewis Carroll, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and W.V. Quine. Organized chronologically, the book is divided into twenty-four chapters, each of which pairs a philosopher with a major paradox, allowing for extended consideration and putting a human face on the strategies that have been taken toward these puzzles. Readers get to follow the minds of Zeno, Socrates, Aquinas, Ockham, Pascal, Kant, Hegel, and many other major philosophers deep inside the tangles of paradox, looking for, and sometimes finding, a way out.

Filled with illuminating anecdotes and vividly written, A Brief History of the Paradox will appeal to anyone who finds trying to answer unanswerable questions a paradoxically pleasant endeavor.

Preface

Chapter 1. Anaximander and the Riddle of Origin

Chapter 2. Pythagoras’s Search for the Common Denominator

Chapter 3. Parmenides on What Is Not

Chapter 4. Sisyphus’s Rock and Zeno’s Paradoxes

Chapter 5. Socrates: The Paradox of Inquiry

Chapter 6. The Megarian Identity Crisis

Chapter 7. Eubulides and the Politics of the Liar

Chapter 8. A Footnote to “Plato”

Chapter 9. Aristotle on Fatalism

Chapter 10. Chrysippus on People Parts

Chapter 11. Sextus Empiricus and the Infinite Regress of Justification

Chapter 12. Augustine’s Pragmatic Paradoxes

Chapter 13. Aquinas: Can God Have a Biography?

Chapter 14. Ockham and the Insolubilia

Chapter 15. Buridan’s Sophisms

Chapter 16. Pascal’s Improbable Calculations

Chapter 17. Leibniz’s Principle of Sufficient Reason

Chapter 18. Hume’s All-Consuming Ideas

Chapter 19. The Common Sense of Thomas Reid

Chapter 20. Kant and the Antinomy of Pure Reason

Chapter 21. Hegel’s World of Contradictions

Chapter 22. Russell’s Set

Chapter 23. Wittgenstein and the Depth of a Grammatical Joke

Chapter 24. Quine’s Question Mark

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