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  1. Zeno's Paradox: Unraveling the Ancient Mystery Behind the Science of Space and Time by Joseph Mazur, 2008-03-25
  2. Zeno's Paradoxes
  3. Key Contemporary Concepts: From Abjection to Zeno's Paradox (Sage Key Concepts) by Dr John Lechte, 2003-02-24
  4. Modern science and Zeno's paradoxes by Adolf Grunbaum, 1968
  5. The Paradoxes of Zeno (Avebury Series in Philosophy) by J. A. Faris, 1996-10
  6. Zeno's paradox and the problem of free will.: An article from: Skeptic (Altadena, CA) by Phil Mole, 2004-01-01
  7. Zeno's Paradox by F. Gordon Robinson, 2007-10-25
  8. The Universal Book of Mathematics: From Abracadabra to Zeno's Paradoxes by David Darling, 2004-08-11
  9. Why mathematical solutions of Zeno's paradoxes miss the point: Zeno's one and many relation and Parmenides' prohibition.: An article from: The Review of Metaphysics by Alba Papa-Grimaldi, 1996-12-01
  10. Supertasks: Zeno's Paradoxes, Hilbert's Paradox of the Grand Hotel, Omega Point, Supertask, Thomson's Lamp
  11. Paradoxes: Paradox, Russell's Paradox, Problem of Evil, Impossible Object, Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, Zeno's Paradoxes, Epimenides Paradox
  12. Zeno of Elea: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  13. ZENO OF ELEAc. 490430 BCE: An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Richard McKirahan, 2006
  14. Towards a definitive solution of Zeno's paradoxes by Fazal Ahmad Shamsi, 1973

21. Election Snared In Zeno's Paradox: Absurdity Knows No Bounds
zeno's paradox and the 2000 Election The Limits of Absurdity. As the marginnarrows we are trapped in ever finer distinctions zeno's paradox.
http://www.nexial.org/ION/zeno.htm
Institute of Nexialism Zeno's Paradox and the 2000 Election: The Limits of Absurdity John J. Kineman
Nexial Institute
Boulder, Colorado
November 13, 2000 Xenophanes was a Greek philosopher who lived in the 6 th Century BC. He is famous for "Zeno's Paradoxes," which were logical, or mathematical puzzlers. One of them is told as a race between a tortoise and a hare (or Achilles, in the original version). The Hare, wanting very badly to race, agrees to give the tortoise a half-way head start. The tortoise agrees, but on the condition that this is done repeatedly for each segment. It then follows that dividing the distance in half indefinitely this way will never end, and thus the hare cannot win. Zeno's paradox is a logical trap that appears in certain problems; and, as it turns out, in popular elections. Take another example: the distance from Los Angeles to San Francisco. What paradox can exist in that, you ask? We can certainly calculate the flying distance. We all know that the road distance will be longer because of all the curves. What about the distance along the coastline? Well, if you follow all the coves and inlets, it is quite long. And if you follow smaller features the variations within the coves, the individual rocks, the sand grains, and so on then how long is it? If the wiggliness of the water's edge (the "fractal dimension" of the coastline) remains about the same at any scale, then the distance is infinite Zeno's Paradox! There is a practical solution, of course. The paradox is a matter of

22. Zeno's Paradoxes
And Zeno of Elea (5th Century BC) was the Zeno of the paradoxes. To me, Zeno'sarrow paradox seems much more interesting than his other paradoxes.
http://www.jimloy.com/physics/zeno.htm
Return to my Physics pages
Go to my home page
Zeno's Paradoxes
Among the most famous of Zeno's "paradoxes" involves Achilles and the tortoise, who are going to run a race. Achilles, being confident of victory, gives the tortoise a head start. Zeno supposedly proves that Achilles can never overtake the tortoise. Here, I paraphrase Zeno's argument: Before Achilles can overtake the tortoise, he must first run to point A, where the tortoise started. But then the tortoise has crawled to point B. Now Achilles must run to point B. But the tortoise has gone to point C, etc. Achilles is stuck in a situation in which he gets closer and closer to the tortoise, but never catches him. What Zeno is doing here, and in one of his other paradoxes, is to divide Achilles' journey into an infinite number of pieces. This is certainly permissible, as any line segment can be divided into an infinite number of points or line segments. This, in effect, divides Achilles' run into an infinite number of tasks. He must pass point A, then B, then C, etc. And what Zeno is arguing is that you can't do an infinite number of tasks in a finite amount of time. Why not? Zeno says that you can divide a line into an infinite number of pieces. And then he says that you cannot divide a time interval into an infinite number of pieces. This is inconsistent.

23. Zeno's Paradox
zeno's paradox. In order for a person to cross a room, that personmust first cross the halfway point of the room. In order to reach
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/3022/zeno.html
Zeno's Paradox
In order for a person to cross a room, that person must first cross the halfway point of the room. In order to reach the halfway point, the person must first reach the midpoint between the origin of the walk and the halfway point. And to reach halfway to the halfway point, the person must cross the halfway to the halfway to the halfway point. Zeno argued that the process could be continued forever. The gist of the argument is that in order to reach the other side of the room, an infinite number of points must be crossed. And logic tells us that an infinite number of points cannot be crossed in a finite period of time. Therefore, it is impossible to cross a room. QED. Back to the Paradox Page.

24. Zeno's Paradox
zeno's paradox of Tortoise and Achilles Zeno of Elea (circa 450 bc) is creditedwith creating several famous paradoxes, but by far the best known is the
http://www.geocities.com/paradox_berrin/eng-5.html
Zeno's Paradox of Tortoise and Achilles: Zeno of Elea ( circa 450 b.c.) is credited with creating several famous paradoxes, but by far the best known is the paradox of the Tortoise and Achilles. (Achilles was the great Greek hero of Homer's The Illiad .) It has inspired many writers and thinkers through the ages, notably Lewis Carroll and Douglas Hofstadter, who also wrote dialogues involving the Tortoise and Achilles.
The original goes something like this: The Tortoise challenged Achilles to a race, claiming that he would win as long as Achilles gave him a small head start. Achilles laughed at this, for of course he was a mighty warrior and swift of foot, whereas the Tortoise was heavy and slow.
"How big a head start do you need?" he asked the Tortoise with a smile.
"Ten meters," the latter replied.
Achilles laughed louder than ever. "You will surely lose, my friend, in that case," he told the Tortoise, "but let us race, if you wish it."
"On the contrary," said the Tortoise, "I will win, and I can prove it to you by a simple argument."

25. 4.1. Series And Convergence
Tortoise. Example 4.1.1 zeno's paradox (Achilles and the Tortoise).Achilles, a fast runner, was asked to race against a tortoise.
http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/numser/series.html
4.1. Series and Convergence
IRA So far we have learned about sequences of numbers. Now we will investigate what may happen when we add all terms of a sequence together to form what will be called an infinite series. The old Greeks already wondered about this, and actually did not have the tools to quite understand it This is illustrated by the old tale of Achilles and the Tortoise. Example 4.1.1: Zeno's Paradox (Achilles and the Tortoise) Achilles, a fast runner, was asked to race against a tortoise. Achilles can run 10 meters per second, the tortoise only 5 meter per second. The track is 100 meters long. Achilles, being a fair sportsman, gives the tortoise 10 meter advantage. Who will win ?
  • Both start running, with the tortoise being 10 meters ahead.
  • After one second, Achilles has reached the spot where the tortoise started. The tortoise, in turn, has run 5 meters.
  • Achilles runs again and reaches the spot the tortoise has just been. The tortoise, in turn, has run 2.5 meters.
  • Achilles runs again to the spot where the tortoise has just been. The tortoise, in turn, has run another 1.25 meters ahead.

26. Example 4.1.1: Zeno Paradox (Achilles And The Tortoise)
The problem with zeno's paradox is that Zeno was uncomfortable withadding infinitely many numbers. In fact, his basic argument
http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/numser/answers/zeno.html
Example 4.1.1: Zeno Paradox (Achilles and the Tortoise)
Achilles is racing against a tortoise. Achilles can run 10 meters per second, the tortoise only 5 meter per second. The track is 100 meters long. Achilles, being a fair sportsman, gives the tortoise 10 meter advantage. Who will win ? Back Let us look at the difference between Achilles and the tortoise: Time Difference t = 10 meters t = 1 5 = 10 / 2 meters t = 1 + 1/2 2.5 = 10 / 4 meters t = 1 + 1/2 + 1/4 1.25 = 10 / 8 meters t = 1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 0.625 = 10 / 16 meters and so on. In general we have: Time Difference t = 1 + 1 / 2 + 1 / 2 n n meters Now we want to take the limit as n goes to infinity to find out when the distance between Achilles and the tortoise is zero. But that involves adding infinitely many numbers in the above expression for the time, and we don't know how to do that. However, if we define S n n then, dividing by 2 and subtracting the two expressions: S n - 1/2 S n n+1 or equivalently, solving for S n S n n+1 But now S n is a simple sequence, for which we know how to take limits. In fact, from the last expression it is clear that

27. Zeno's Paradox
zeno's paradox and Other Musings. Hit with insomnia the other night, I began thinkingabout zeno's paradox and what made it a paradox. zeno's paradox, Resolved.
http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~thumper/info/zeno/
Zeno's Paradox and Other Musings
Hit with insomnia the other night, I began thinking about Zeno's Paradox and what made it a paradox. Zeno, in case you don't know, was a Greek philosopher who believed that existence was static and that motion and change were rather impossible. (I got this out of an encyclopaedeia, okay? This is the "official" line on what he was talking about.) The classic argument that Zeno hit upon to demonstrate this (based on a technique called reductio ad absurdum ) involves a runner on a race course. Zeno argued that the runner could never finish the course because first he must run the first half of the course, and then he must run half of what is left, and so on an infinite number of times... The end result of this infinite halving is that the racer must never reach the finish because he always has some distance left, of which he must always first travel half. Applying this to any distance shows that it is impossible for an object to move at all! A couple of things occured to me while thinking about this. The most obvious thing was that this is a good argument for space (or time) being quantized. If either time or space is quantized, then that cuts off the infinite recursion and allows the runner to bridge the last quanta. Still, the fact that the paradox doesn't happen doesn't actually imply that space is quantized. (Note: the latest issue of Science News has a cover article on the latest physics theory "space-time foam" which implies that space is quantized; the smallest length you can have is 10^-35 meters.)

28. Snapping And Zeno's Paradox , By Rev. Chuan Zhi Shakya
Home Literature Essays by Chuan Zhi Shakya » Snapping and Zeno'sParadox. More Features back. Snapping and zeno's paradox. by Chuan
http://www.hsuyun.org/Dharma/zbohy/Literature/essays/czs/snapping.html
Hsu Yun Poetry Literature Visual Arts ... Essays by Chuan Zhi Shakya
More Features (click here) Essays by Ming Zhen Shakya Inspirational Writings Chants Prayers Dharma Talks Martial Arts The Diamond Sutra Poetry by Master Hsu Yun The Seventh World of Chan Ruminations on Zen's Cows Empty Cloud: Zen Teachings Maxims of Master Han Shan Site Index Search back
Snapping and Zeno's Paradox
by Chuan Zhi Shakya, OHY
czs@hsuyun.org
    "Around puberty, the young male of the Ananda tribe of central Australia is taken from his mother, isolated in the wilderness and deprived of food for a prolonged period of time. He is kept awake at night in a state of constant fear by the eerie, whirling sound of the bullroarer, a native hunting device, until the combined physical and emotional stresses reach their maximum effect. At that moment, the elders of the tribe converge on the terrified youth wearing grotesque masks and covered with vivid body paints and proceed to subject him to a painful ritual of initiation into manhood. If he survives the ordeal, he young man emerges from the ritual in a drastically reduced state of mind, his awareness continuing at a level only sufficient to allow absolute adherence to the strict laws and taboos of the tribe. The adult Ananda tribesman may spend his entire life in this altered state the natives call Dream Time . He will stand on one leg for hours, completely motionless, in a waking trance so deep that flies may crawl across his eyeballs without causing him to blink."

29. Zeno's Paradox
back to list, zeno's paradox. Q Hi, Two Questions First one is aboutmatter,light and energy. If there is such thing as antimatter
http://van.hep.uiuc.edu/van/qa/section/New_and_Exciting_Physics/Quantum_Mechanic
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to list
Zeno's Paradox
Q:
Hi, Two Questions... First one is about matter,light and energy. If there is such thing as anti-matter, could that mean the energy would be negative. And since light is a form of energy, could there be anti-light? For example, could there be such a thing as a "Flashdark" or Anti-FlashLight that would cast a shadow, or beam of anti-light? Next question is about math in respect to time. Say we were to throw something at a wall. And the time it took to reach the wall (from my hand) was 1 second. It would then make sence to say that at about .5 seconds, the ball was half way there. And at .25 seconds it was approximately a quarter of the way there, if you kept dividing in half, time will have never reached zero, therefore the ball will have never been in my hand. This seems weird, but mathematically it doesn't seem to make sence.. Thanks :)
Micah (age )
ouc
Canada
A:
Hi Micah,
1a) Yes, there is such a thing as antimatter, and it is routinely produced and studied in physics laboratories around the world. Take a look at our antimatter answers , or use the search function to look for answers containing the word "antimatter".

30. Zeno's Paradox
zeno's paradox Time 4'54 Lyrics Andy Wagner First performed November 22,1997 show 4 Appears as track 2 on Pastor of Muppets Tim electric
http://www.losingblueprint.com/hmmobzenos.html
[zeno's paradox]
[Time: 4'54"]
[Lyrics: Andy Wagner]
[First performed November 22, 1997 show #4]
[Appears as track #2 on "Pastor of Muppets"]
[Tim: electric bass, Nevin: violin, Kort: bouzouki, Jamie: percussion, vocals, Andy: guitar, vocals, Thom: guitar, vocals]
This is definitely a math-rock song. It deals with Zeno's Paradox,
which states that you can never get from point A to point B without going half
of the distance, and then half of the remaining distance, and then half of that
remaining distance, etc., thus you have to travel through an
infinite number of half-distances, and can never get there. And imagining yourself at point A, and the object of your enamoration at point B. Instant romance! Viva la math! I proffered my first step toward you And in that advance moved twice as near In calculating a foothold I thought I'd soon be there and you'd be here But the second stretch was not such a stretch And there still lay One quarter between us seamed from the half I'm trying to reach you but I'm thrown off by the math Should throw physics to the dogs And just jump, not crawl, not creep

31. Zeno's Paradox
Non Archimedean version of zeno's paradox. Recall the usual versionhas Achilles chasing a turtle, where the turtle is given a ten
http://www.lix.polytechnique.fr/~ilan/zeno.html
Non Archimedean version of Zeno's paradox.
Recall the usual version has Achilles chasing a turtle, where the turtle is given a ten cubit head start and Achilles runs ten times faster than the turtle. When Achilles runs 10 cubits, the turtle goes 1 cubit. When Achilles runs 1 cubit, the turtle goes 1/10 of a cubit. It follows that Achilles catches the turtle in 10 + 1 + 1/10 + ... cubits. In modern notation, one can write these numbers as decimals yielding
It follows that Achilles catches the turtle in 11 1/9 cubits. The non Archimedean case has the turtle trying to catch Achilles who is now given a ten cubit head start.
When the turtle goes 10 cubits, Achilles will have run 100 cubits. When the turtle goes 100 cubits then Achilles will have run 1000 cubits, and so on.
It follows that the turtle goes 10 + 100 + 1000 + .... Ordinarily, this would be considered as meaningless or ``infinity''. However, one can consider this purely formally, in other words, without caring too much about the actual meaning of the numbers and just using algebraic manipulations. So let x = 10 + 100 + 1000+ ..., then
9(x + 1) = 9 + 90 + 900 + 9000 + ... = ... 9999.

32. Math Lair - Zeno's Paradox
Click Here! zeno's paradox. Zeno's Racecourse Paradox involves the story of a racebetween Achilles and a tortoise. Zeno's Bisection Paradox Zeno's Assertion
http://www.stormloader.com/ajy/zeno.html
Zeno's Paradox
Zeno's Racecourse Paradox involves the story of a race between Achilles and a tortoise. In this race, Achilles, being much faster, gives the tortoise a head start. Zeno's assertion is that Achilles can never overtake the tortoise, since when Achilles reaches the point where the tortoise started, the tortoise has moved ahead somewhat, say to point A. When Achilles reaches point A, the tortoise has moved ahead to point B. When Achilles reaches point B, the tortoise has moved further. Therefore, the tortoise must always hold a lead. This is quite similar to Zeno's bisection paradox, which is examined in detail below . This conclusion is very counter-intuitive. For example, everyone can remember overtaking someone while walking, driving or biking. If Zeno's assertions were true, motion would be impossible.
Zeno's Bisection Paradox:
Zeno's Assertion:
A runner can never reach the end of a racecourse in a finite time.
Statement: Reason: The remaining interval is divided in half. There are an infinite number of such halfway points which the runner must reach. Each of these points will take a finite time.

33. Zeno's Paradox
zeno's paradox. Our bodies pass, brushed like a short whisk of a paintbrush, streaking sunspotted land scapes, carved and stroked
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/svp/st_org/stylus/s96/poems/zeno.html
Zeno's Paradox
Our bodies pass, brushed like a short whisk of a paint brush, streaking sun-spotted land scapes, carved and stroked tu- lips which wet and taut create space and distance between dancing atoms, melting molecules into corporal, colliding bodies. Zeno never balanced my x with your y; might our halves never cover half of the distance between us. Skies may fall, north calls to south, I call to you, electrons force boundaries tearing stars from their infinite heavens and my lips from losing you. Julie A. Crowley
back to the Stylus Homepage.

34. ArtCar Fest: John Wilson's "Zeno's Paradox"
The West Coast's Largest Gathering of Art Cars! Thursday,September 26 Sunday, September 29, 2002.
http://www.artcarfest.com/vehicles/zenos.paradox.html
The West Coast's Largest Gathering of Art Cars!
Thursday, September 26 Sunday, September 29, 2002
Zeno's Paradox John Wilson
home
vehicles fashion show films ... contact

35. Three Interpretations Of Zeno's Paradox
Quorum of One is intended for adult readers. This issue Three modernday interpretationsof. zeno's paradox. With a double zeugma. - I -. Figs Zeno, p.
http://mapage.noos.fr/qoo/Quorum35.html
David Jaggard's
Quorum of One
Issue number 35 April Wet humor on the Web since Quorum of One is intended for adult readers This issue:
Three modern-day interpretations of
Zeno's Paradox
With a double zeugma
- I - Figs Zeno, p Sometimes I wonder why I ever got out of the philosophy racket. I had a good thing going there for a while. Scroll contracts with hefty advances, personal appearances at archery contests and inter-species footraces, after-bacchanal speeches... I was clearing a million a year easy. Then one New Year's Eve I checked my bank balance and I only had half a mill. A year later I was down to 250 grand, and the next year... Well, let's not dwell on the past. I'm in a different line of work now. Private investigation is my game. Hunting down missing persons, tailing unfaithful spouses, checking out the backgrounds of quiz-show winners who marry recently bereaved royalty, that kind of thing.
A lot of people think there's something glamorous about being a private eye. Well, I can tell you one thing about those people: none of them were in my office at about 2:00 pm last Thursday. Let me tell you how it happened... I was sitting at my desk doing nothing after lunch. To tell you the truth, I had been sitting at my desk doing nothing before lunch. And during lunch too, unless you call chomping down a corned lamb on pita and slugging back a bolt of Retsina "doing something".

36. Zeno's Paradox
If the classic paradox does not suit you, listed next are two more examples of impossiblestatements. OneSentence Paradox Example. Two-Sentence Paradox Example.
http://members.aol.com/trwstrong/zeno.html
The Modern Zeno Page
There are actually two ancient philosophers named Zeno. They are different, so be careful when talking about Zeno. There was the one Zeno, Zeno of Cittium. He was a philosopher who taught in Athens back in the late 300's to early 200's B.C. He is noted for being the founder of Stoic philosophy. He is not the philospher who inspired this page.
There was also the other (earlier) Zeno, Zeno of Elea. He was a student of Parmenides in the 6th century B.C. This Zeno and his paradoxes (the Dichotomy, the Achilles, the Arrow, and the Stadium) are mentioned by both Plato and Aristotle. He was the inspiration for this page, even though it does not use any of his paradoxes. It does use a classic paradox though: the Cretan's saying that all Cretans are liars (found in the Bible in Titus 1:12.)
Examples
If the classic paradox does not suit you, listed next are two more examples of impossible statements.
One-Sentence Paradox Example
This sentence is false.
Two-Sentence Paradox Example
The following sentence is true.

37. Zeno's Paradoxes
Zeno's writings have not survived, so his paradoxes are known to us chiefly through it,it is much less clear what Zeno intended by the Stadium paradox than by
http://members.aol.com/kiekeben/zeno.html
Zeno's Paradoxes
Zeno of Elea was an ancient Greek (born around 490 B.C.) who lived in what is now southern Italy. He became a disciple of the philosopher Parmenides, a philosopher who went around telling people that reality was an absolute, unchanging whole, and that therefore many things we take for granted, such as motion and plurality, were simply illusions. This kind of thing must no doubt have brought on ridicule from the more common-sensical Eleatics, and so Zeno set out to defend his master’s position by inventing ingenious problems for the common-sense view. Ever since then, Zeno’s paradoxes have been debated by philosophers and mathematicians. Zeno's writings have not survived, so his paradoxes are known to us chiefly through Aristotle's criticisms of them. Aristotle analyzed four paradoxes of motion: the Racetrack (or Dichotomy), Achilles and the Tortoise, the Arrow, and the Stadium (or Moving Rows). However, based on Aristotle's description of it, it is much less clear what Zeno intended by the Stadium paradox than by the other three. I have therefore left out this fourth paradox.
The Racetrack (or Dichotomy)
One can never reach the end of a racecourse, for in order to do so one would first have to reach the halfway mark, then the halfway mark of the remaining half, then the halfway mark of the final fourth, then of the final eighth, and so on

38. Zeno
zeno's paradox and the Creationist Demand for Transitional Forms. This certainlywould evade zeno's paradox if distance were infinitely divisible.
http://www.glenn.morton.btinternet.co.uk/zeno.htm
Zeno's Paradox and the Creationist Demand for Transitional Forms
By Glenn R. Morton
This may be freely distributed so long as no chances are made and no monetary charge is assessed. http://www.glenn.morton.btinternet.co.uk/zeno.htm Visitors to these pages since 12-29-97
One might not think of modern anti-evolutionary apologists as having much in common with ancient Greek philosophers, but they do. What this paper will suggest is that they, like Zeno, argued for a particular viewpoint by creating an absurdity. Zeno believed his teacher Parmenides. Parmenides taught that sense data was an illusion. What you see isn't real. He taught that there was no change in the world, no multiplicity of objects. Being was one and all being was unchanging.
Now it is not difficult to see that Zeno's paradox doesn't apply to real life. Why? Because the mathematical laws which are used in Zeno's paradoxinfinite divisibility of spacedoes not happen. It is clear from the fact that Zeno's demonstration that infinite divisibility requires no motion combined with the observation that athletes actually finish races that there comes a point in the division process in which the distance to the finish line is so small that it can no longer be divided. Thus, this paradox hints at the quantization of space, the famous del X of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. While Zeno didn't come to that obvious conclusion, it is one mathematical way out of the paradox.
Similarly, Zeno presented a paradox that said that our athlete could not beat a tortoise. Give the tortoise a head start on our swift athlete. In order to pass the tortoise, the runner must first reach the point where the tortoise started from. But by the time our muscle-bound but inept hero has gotten there, the tortoise isn't there anymore. He has moved a bit. So in order to pass the tortoise, the muscleman must now run to the place where the tortoise is now, but once again, the tortoise has already moved and the athlete can continue this forever and never catch up with the tortoise. Both of these paradoxes show that the continuum doesn't exist. Space is not equally divisible.

39. Zeno's Paradox
Farewell, welfare. (Literary note) Borges, when finishing his short story Deathand the Compass, makes reference to an infinite labyrinth a straight line.
http://www.sfu.ca/~dkeller/TOUCH_PC/TEXT/FAREWEL.HTM
Farewell , welfare
(Literary note) Borges, when finishing his short story Death and the Compass, makes reference to an infinite labyrinth: a straight line. This maze is a variation of one of the paradoxes proposed by Zeno. Zeno states that to travel a distance d, you need to cover d/2 first. To get to d/2, you need to reach d/4. To. . . well, the story goes on. In other words, why ever move if we won't ever get anywhere?

40. Zeno's Paradox
crystal wisdomof-jams, critic very, VERY seriously. Got that? Zeno'sParadox. The great Greek philosopher Zeno of Elea (born sometime
http://www.northernheads.com/specialarticles/zeno.htm
Zenos Pairaducks UPDATE- Monday, Oct. 15, 2001 Note: looking for contributions
in the form of Reviews, Editorials,
and Classified Ads.
Email Me
Maybe I shouldn't have worn my critics cap to the Attic but I was mostly hoping I would be denied entrance by one of the bouncers. Maybe it was this failed attempt at glory that embodied itself as skepticism toward the effort given by the Burt Nielson Band I remember the day well, the year 2000 was still a novelty, it was my frosh year, i was being introduced to all the beauties of University life. I woke at 5:00 in my residence room, stumbled down to supper, grabbed a coast, asked a friend if they knew the BNB and soon we were in the Attic emptying our tuition money into a $6.00 cover and ryes galore. The Dead was new, I'd heard a lot about Phish and it there was something encompassing that held the title "jam." The BNB tickled my brain with Funky Shoes or funkin' shoes....something like that. A year later, school sucks, I'm drinking cheap wine talking about "The recent events." I heard

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