wuliheron said:
First off, paradoxes do exist in the real world as far as we know. As I have already pointed out, the EPR experiment is one of the more famous proofs that the most successful physical theory ever is apparently paradoxical. Secondly, as I already pointed out, it is impossible to prove a paradox exists! Paradoxes do not have truth values and the proof he is talking about is I assume a logical proof!
Thus, the only conclusion I can draw is that he is speaking from a logically biased position, or he is speaking in paradoxes. Which it is I have no real clue.
I believe what Sikz has pointed to borders on profound. I'll try to explain.
He has noticed there are no
confirmed paradoxes in the real world;that is, we cannot
observe them. Before the so-called "EPR paradox" were the position-momentum paradox, the wave-particle paradox, and then, as you've pointed out, the liar's and heap paradoxes, and so on. But what is creating the paradox? I say what happens every time, without exception, is that our logic is confounded by our experience. Because of that Sikz asks if there is a flaw in our logic. I don't think so at all, and because there isn't, the implications could be profound.
Logic is grounded in math, and math symbolically represents the order and structure of physical processes and objects. The logic of a situation is completely different than the experience of a situation, so it is very clear that experience is not logic. Logic is a process of our computing mind, experience is a subjective element of conscious existence, and therein lies the confusion. We can experience reality, but it is impossible to represent all of it with math/logic. There are aspects of reality which appear distinct from other aspects, and so lend themselves to logic. But there are also aspects which are holistic, continuous, homogeneous and seemingly impossible to pull out of the whole . . . If something cannot be segmented, logic alone is going to miss it.
Back to the question of profundity and paradox. The paradox proves that "mind" (mentality) does not expose the whole of reality to us, but merely a framework. The paradox often arises when homogeneity and "parts" are put at odds
mentally. Because it can't be resolved mentally/logically, we call it a paradox until, that is, we find a way to experience a situation and realize the overall thing that's going on. When that happens, something that was impossible to accept logically, like wave-particle duality, suddenly is accepted when we understand that EM is both wave and particle (in that instance, wave is the homogeneous aspect and particle is the "part" aspect). So, there
is no paradox in the real world, just as Sikz says, only mental confusion.
I like this problem because I believe it demonstrates how easily we geniuses can be "in our minds." That is, to get so caught up in trying to think our way to the truth that we forget to experientially participate in life the way we need to in order to truly know reality.