Encyclopedia > Weyl's paradox

  Article Content

Grelling-Nelson paradox

Redirected from Weyl's paradox

The Grelling-Nelson paradox is a verbal paradox formulated in 1908 by Kurt Grelling[?] and Leonard Nelson[?] and sometimes mistakenly attributed to German philosopher and mathematician Herman Weyl[?]. It is a reformulation of the Barber paradox and Russell's paradox.

The paradox deals with the made-up words "autological" and "heterological". A word is called autological if it applies to itself. For example "short" is autological, since the word "short" is short. "Sophisticated" is also autological. Words that are not autological are called heterological. "Long" is a heterological word, for example. The obvious question arises: is "heterological" heterological? There is no consistent answer: if it is, then it isn't; if it isn't, then it is -- think it through.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
David McReynolds

... Democrats USA by the right-wing leadership (neo-conservatives). Michael Harrington and his followers would split off and found the Democratic Socialists of America ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 127.5 ms