They are a source of endless fascination and frustration,.

I’m not sure why this is always seen as a philosophical conundrum, when it involves science, and, to a lesser extent, psychology.

A paradox is a set 1 of inconsistent propositions such that it is rationally permissible to find the conjunction of any proper subset of them plausible even while being aware that the set as a whole is inconsistent.

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Web — by doing so, we highlight the breadth of underlying research, depict interwoven and paradoxical relationships across categories, and surface a core insight that navigating paradox is paradoxical.

This list includes well known paradoxes, grouped thematically.

You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.

Web — paradoxes—in which the same information may lead to two contradictory conclusions—give us pleasure and torment at the same time.

This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.

Web — epistemic paradoxes are riddles that turn on the concept of knowledge ( episteme is greek for knowledge).

The mirror paradox is best stated as a question:

This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.

Web — epistemic paradoxes are riddles that turn on the concept of knowledge ( episteme is greek for knowledge).

The mirror paradox is best stated as a question:

The grouping is approximate, as paradoxes may fit into more than one category.

Web — the mirror paradox.

Webepistemic paradoxes—for example, the lottery paradox and the preface paradox—are good examples, as are pragmatic paradoxes (e. g. , moore's paradox) and many ethical paradoxes (e. g. , the paradox of deontology, the paradox of deterrence) in which dialetheist responses would clearly fail to get purchase.

Why is a mirror image seen as left to right reversed but not top to bottom?

Finally, we offer suggestions and provocations for future research.

By offering a platform for users to sell goods.

Webepistemic paradoxes—for example, the lottery paradox and the preface paradox—are good examples, as are pragmatic paradoxes (e. g. , moore's paradox) and many ethical paradoxes (e. g. , the paradox of deontology, the paradox of deterrence) in which dialetheist responses would clearly fail to get purchase.

Why is a mirror image seen as left to right reversed but not top to bottom?

Finally, we offer suggestions and provocations for future research.

By offering a platform for users to sell goods.

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