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  1. Paradox plays by David Rhodes, 1987

81. The Paradigms And Paradoxes Of Intelligence, Part 1: Russell's Paradox
KurzweilAI.net, The Paradigms and Paradoxes of Intelligence, Part 1 russell's paradox Theabove is my version of what has become known as russell's paradox.
http://www.kurzweilai.net/articles/art0257.html?printable=1

82. The Paradigms And Paradoxes Of Intelligence, Part 1: Russell's Paradox
Origin Kurzweil Archives The Paradigms and Paradoxes of Intelligence, Part 1russell's paradox Permanent link to this article http//www.kurzweilai.net
http://www.kurzweilai.net/articles/art0257.html?m=10

83. Real Paradoxes
russell's paradox. russell's paradox is an example of a genuine selfreferringstatement, therefore it becomes particularly interesting in my investigation.
http://www.algonet.se/~jen-tale/para_rea.html

84. Www-webont-wg@w3.org From January 2002: Re: Patel-Schneider Par
But .. russell's paradox (in English) The Russellset is the set of all things that do not belong to themselves.
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-webont-wg/2002Jan/0099.html
Re: Patel-Schneider Paradox ...
From: Peter F. Patel-Schneider ( pfps@research.bell-labs.com
Date: Fri, Jan 18 2002
  • Next message: Jeff Heflin: "Original Slides from General Requirements Group" To: jjc@hplb.hpl.hp.com Cc: www-webont-wg@w3.org Message-Id: <20020118091722L.pfps@research.bell-labs.com> Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 09:17:22 -0500 From: "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" < pfps@research.bell-labs.com > Subject: Re: Patel-Schneider Paradox ... From: "Jeremy Carroll" < jjc@hplb.hpl.hp.com
  • 85. Www-webont-wg@w3.org From January 2002: Patel-Schneider Paradox
    = But .. russell's paradox (in English) The Russell setis the set of all things that do not belong to themselves. This
    http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-webont-wg/2002Jan/0096.html
    Patel-Schneider Paradox ...
    From: Jeremy Carroll ( jjc@hplb.hpl.hp.com
    Date: Fri, Jan 18 2002
  • Next message: Frank van Harmelen: "Re: F2F: The requirements vote" From: "Jeremy Carroll" < jjc@hplb.hpl.hp.com www-webont-wg@w3.org
  • 86. Department Of Mathematics And Statistics
    Bertrand russell's paradox. Dr Bertrand russell's paradox discoveredin 1901 surfaces at the very beginning of set theory. Several
    http://www.math.uregina.ca/seminars/j-20020212.html
    Junior Seminar - Winter 2002
    Tuesday, February 12, 3:30p.m., CW307.18
    Contact People Undergraduate Graduate ... Local Access only
    Bertrand Russell's Paradox
    Dr. H. N. Gupta,
    Professor Emeritus,
    Abstract:
    A set or aggregate may be defined as a collection of some kind of other. In mathematics, the objects are usually mental objects or concepts; i.e. concepts and ideas. George Cantor (1845-1918) developed the sets in the latter part of the 19th century. Other mathematicians helped expand Cantor's work into a serious discipline, because it was seen that many branches of emerging mathematics depended to some extent on the notion and properties of sets. A critical scrutiny of the results obtained soon revealed contradictions. Antinomies appeared in the very advanced parts of set theory. Bertrand Russell's paradox discovered in 1901 surfaces at the very beginning of set theory. Several attempts have since been made to set up rules and axioms which would block Russell's paradox. No general method has yet been found that would guarantee absolute freedom from contradictions. It can be claimed, however, that contradictions are not encountered in the uses to which the theory of sets put in mathematics. In today's talk we will introduce the paradox put forward by Russell and analyse it with a view to suggesting means of avoiding it.

    87. LinuxGuruz Foldoc Page
    Try this search on OneLook / Google. Nearby terms Russell, Bertrand « Russell'sAttic « russell's paradox « rusty iron » rusty memory » RUTH » rw
    http://foldoc.linuxguruz.org/foldoc.php?Russell's Paradox

    88. Kevin C. Klement: CV
    russell's paradox in Appendix B of the Principles of Mathematics Was Frege'sResponse Adequate? History and Philosophy of Logic 22 (2001) 1328.
    http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~klement/cv.html
    Home Courses CV Links ... UMass Philosophy Curriculum Vitae Kevin C. Klement klement@philos.umass.edu
    Assistant Professor
    Philosophy Department
    , Bartlett Hall
    University of Massachusetts, Amherst

    130 Hicks Way
    Amherst, MA 01003-9269
    Office Phone:
    Home Phone:
    FAX: Personal Information:
    Born September 18, 1974 in Milwaukee, WI. Areas of Specialization: History of Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Language, Logic Areas of Interest: Philosophy of Science, Ethics Education: Ph.D. ( Philosophy University of Iowa , July 2000
    B.A. ( Philosophy / Peace Studies), University of Minnesota, Morris , June 1995 Languages: (in order of proficiency) English, German, French Scholarly Works: Ph. D. Dissertation "Redressing Frege's Failure to Develop a Logical Calculus for the Theory of Sinn and Bedeutung " (Advisor: Gregory Landini , University of Iowa, 2000.) Books
    Frege and the Logic of Sense and Reference
    . New York: Routledge, 2002. Articles in Print or Forthcoming "Russell's Anticipation of the Lambda Calculus," forthcoming in

    89. Owen Massey - Libraries - Maths For Librarians
    induction. 3. russell's paradox. The Library. See Francis Moorcroft,'russell's paradox' in The philosopher's magazine 3, 1998. AD
    http://owen.massey.net/libraries/maths.html
    Owen Massey Libraries
    Maths for librarians
    Some of you may have had occasion to run into mathematicians and to wonder therefore how they got that way
    Tom Lehrer , introduction to Lobachevsky Me myself I got nothing to prove
    Tracy Chapman Fast car Librarianship in the United Kingdom is now a graduate profession: it is necessary (though far from sufficient) to have a degree, whether in librarianship or a more conventional academic subject. Many people, when they've finished laughing, have expressed surprise that entry to the profession needs to be guarded so jealously. This page is a first attempt to indicate how my first degree in mathematics is highly relevant to my vocation as a librarian - and vice versa.
    0. Contents
    • Introduction
    • 0. Contents [the natural numbers start with in this jurisdiction]
    • 1. Information science and information theory
    • 2. The Librarian's Nightmare
    • 3. Russell's Paradox
    • 4. The Library of Babel
    • 5. The fractal dimension of the Dewey Decimal Classification
    • 6. Great mathematical librarians
    • Colophon
    1. Information science and information theory

    90. Web Links For Chapter 1
    Page 45. The online Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy contains anexcellent discussion of russell's paradox. (russell's paradox).
    http://www.mhhe.com/math/advmath/rosen/student/webres/ch1links.mhtml
    Web Links for Chapter 1 Section 1.1 Logic Page 2 Information on logic and its applications can be found at http://www.rbjones.com/rbjpub/logic/index.htm Page 3 An extensive biography of George Boole, including a portrait, can be found at the Roger P@rsons_world of Lincolnshire site. http://homepages.enterprise.net/rogerp/george/boole.html (Roger P@rsons_world of George Boole) A biography and a portrait of George Boole can be found at the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Boole.html (Boole) Another source for biographical information and a portrait of Boole is http://www.digitalcentury.com/encyclo/update/boole.html#return (Jones Telecommunications and Multimedia Encyclopedia) A copy of George Boole's pioneering article "The Calculus of Logic," published in 1848, can be seen at the History of Mathematics Archive at the School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/HistMath/People/Boole/CalcLogic/ Page 9 Information on Boolean searching can found at the following sites: http://www.sps.edu/Academics/AIS/Library/Hypertext_tutorial/boolean.shtml

    91. An Intuitivistic Solution Of The Continuum Hypothesis For Definable Sets And Res
    First we consider russell's paradox. 12. russell's paradox This is the simplestof the logical paradoxes. It can be described as follows previous.
    http://www.farazgodrejjoshi.com/page14.htm
    An intuitivistic solution of the Continuum Hypothesis for definable sets and resolution of the set theoretic paradoxes numbers that can be described in a finite number of words of the English language! This apparent contradiction that on the one hand a set such as R cannot be said to exist but on the other hand R can be logically conceived as the set I, forces us to the startling conclusion that whereas a set such as R cannot be said to exist, it can be logically conceived! As mentioned earlier, our point of departure from the earlier held view is that WHEREAS THE STRONG ASSUMPTION 'R CAN BE DESCRIBED IN TERMS OF THE EXPRESSION BY WHICH IT IS LOGICALLY CONCEIVED' IS YET CONSIDERED EQUIVALENT TO THE ASSUMPTION 'R EXISTS', THIS IS NOT SO FOR THE WEAK ASSUMPTION 'R CAN BE LOGICALLY CONCEIVED', SO THAT IT IS NOT CONTRADICTORY TO MAINTAIN THAT ALTHOUGH 'R EXISTS' CANNOT BE SAID, 'R CAN BE LOGICALLY CONCEIVED' CAN BE SAID! Note that unlike the situation in Berry's paradox wherein the set F could actually be produced by listing its elements, the set I by comparison, can neither be produced nor defined: In fact, the assumption that I is definable/ describable, yields the contradiction that is Richard's paradox.

    92. Russel's Paradox
    essay . russell's paradox Philosophical Ponderings of a Confused DiscreteStudent. How does this tie in with russell's paradox? Okay
    http://jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu/~blee27/essays/russels_paradox.htm
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    The GNU GPL ESSAYS Scientific Fun With Psi Russel's Paradox Ancient Mathematics Creative Satan Sophistry No Regrets Quiet Revolution POETRY About the Poems My Poems Things to do Wooded Forest My Song Rendezvous ... Kind of Slick Other Poems The Raven Song of Myself STORIES Blindman Kallista Story Ticket to Trouble Russel's Paradox
    This is a short little essay I wrote for a Discrete Mathematics class I took. Oh, and by "short little essay" I mean "hideously too long essay". Russell's Paradox Philosophical Ponderings of a Confused Discrete Student So, who is this Russell dude anyway, and what is his paradox? Russell was a mathematician that introduced an interesting concept sometime about the time the 19th century was rolling into the 20th. He asked us to consider a question. Something along the lines of, "Does the set of all sets that do not contain themselves contain itself?" A mouthful. How do we answer such a question? Let X be the set of all sets that do not contain themselves. The question now becomes "Is X a member of X?"

    93. Maths Thesaurus: Russell's Paradox
    Home russell's paradox The paradox which prompted Bertrand Russell andothers to rethink the theory of sets, early in the 20th century
    http://thesaurus.maths.org/dictionary/map/word/1371
    Russell's paradox
    The paradox which prompted Bertrand Russell and others to re-think the theory of sets, early in the 20th century: A set can contain other sets as members. So it is possible for a set to have a member which is itself. A normal set is a set which does not contain itself. Now think of the set of all normal sets. Is it a normal set, or not?
    Find similar words

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    nrich@damtp.cam.ac.uk

    94. Math Lair - Paradoxes
    Zeno's Paradox russell's paradox One can classify sets into one of two categories. Greeling'sParadox A version of russell's paradox using words.
    http://www.stormloader.com/ajy/paradoxes.html
    Paradoxes
    A paradox is a statement that goes against our intuition but may be true, or a statement that is self-contradictory. The paradoxes listed below and most other mathematical paradoxes fall into one of two categories: either they result from the counter-intuitive properties of infinity , or are a result of self-reference.
    Some Famous Paradoxes:
    Zeno's Paradox
    Russell's Paradox
    One can classify sets into one of two categories. The first category is sets that are not members of themselves. This contains most of the sets we run into in "real life". For example, the set of all penguins falls in the first category, because the set of all penguins is a set, not a penguin. On the other hand, some sets are members of themselves. The set of all non-penguins, for example, is a member of itself. So is the set of all sets.
    In which category would we find the set of all sets that are not members of themselves? If this set is not a member of itself, then it is a member of itself. If it is, then it isn't. So, this set is a member of itself if and only if it is not a member of itself, which is the paradox. This is similar in concept to the Cretan Liar paradox.
    An article about Russell's Paradox at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    Greeling's Paradox
    A version of Russell's Paradox using words. Some adjectives are self-descriptive, like "tiny", "unhyphenated", and "pentasyllabic". On the other hand, other adjectives are not self-descriptive, like "bisyllabic", "big", "tasty", and "incomplete". Call the self-descriptive adjectives

    95. Russell's Antinomy -- From MathWorld
    russell's Antinomy, Bertrand Russell discovered this paradox and sent it in aletter to G. Frege just as Frege was completing Grundlagen der Arithmetik.
    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/RussellsAntinomy.html

    Foundations of Mathematics
    Logic Paradoxes Foundations of Mathematics ... General Set Theory
    Russell's Antinomy

    Let R be the set of all sets which are not members of themselves. Then R is neither a member of itself nor not a member of itself. Symbolically, let . Then iff Bertrand Russell discovered this paradox and sent it in a letter to G. Frege just as Frege was completing Grundlagen der Arithmetik. This invalidated much of the rigor of the work, and Frege was forced to add a note at the end stating, "A scientist can hardly meet with anything more undesirable than to have the foundation give way just as the work is finished. I was put in this position by a letter from Mr. Bertrand Russell when the work was nearly through the press." Barber Paradox Catalogue Paradox Grelling's Paradox
    References Courant, R. and Robbins, H. "The Paradoxes of the Infinite." §2.4.5 in What Is Mathematics?: An Elementary Approach to Ideas and Methods, 2nd ed. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, p. 78, 1996. Curry, H. B.

    96. Russell's Real Paradox: The Wise Man Is A Fool
    russell's Real paradox The Wise Man Is a Fool. Philip J. Davis. SIAMNews, Volume 26, Number 6, July 1994. Bertrand Russell A Life
    http://www.siam.org/siamnews/bookrevs/davis794.htm
    Russell's Real Paradox: The Wise Man Is a Fool
    Philip J. Davis
    SIAM News, Volume 26, Number 6, July 1994
    Bertrand Russell: A Life
    By Caroline Moorehead
    Viking, New York, 1993, 596 pages, $30.00
    Reading this confession in Moorehead's excellent biography, I wondered just where Russell had picked up these factors. Was it as a young student, cramming for admission to Cambridge? I wondered whether he knew that this expression is the determinant of the $3 x 3$ circulant matrix whose first row is $[a, b, c]? And did he know that the factors, linear in $a, b, c,$ are the three eigenvalues of the matrix? Did he know that this factorization was historically the seed that, watered by Frobenius, grew into the great subject of group representation theory? I conjecture that he did not. To Russell, the algebraic expression was a mantra. He saw mathematics as the stabilizing force in the universe; it was the one place where absolute certainty reigned. In search of this certainty, groping for it, he said, as one might grope for religious faith, he devoted the first half of a very long life to an attempt to establish the identity of mathematics and logic. I first heard of Russell as an undergraduate. I did a chapter of Principia Mathematica, his masterwork, written (1910-1913) with Alfred North Whitehead, as a reading period assignment in a course in mathematical logic. At that time Russell was a celebrity, front-page news, having left the dots and epsilons and the "if-thens" of logic far behind. He had been appointed to a professorship of philosophy at CCNY in 1940, and almost immediately a charge of immorality was laid against him. It hit the papers. I, together with most undergraduates, sided with John Dewey, Albert Einstein, and Charlie Chaplin as they rushed in to defend Russell's right to teach epistemology.

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