non-contradiction, principle of
- non-contradiction, principle of
(or law of )
The law of logic that it is not the case that (
p & not-
p ).
Contradiction is the final logical stopping-point: if we can derive a contradiction from a set of premises, then at least one of them is false (see
reductio ad absurdum ). If we ask what is so bad about contradiction, one answer is that a contradiction cannot be true (classically, if one conjunct
p is true, then the other not-
p is false, and vice versa, so they cannot be true together; see also
negation ). Another answer is that from a contradiction anything whatsoever can be derived, which is true in classical logical systems. See
dialetheia ;
strict implication, paradox of.
Philosophy dictionary.
Academic.
2011.
Look at other dictionaries:
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