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| In article <1164137174.076167.163430@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com>,
Alistair <alistair@ld50macca.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>
>docdwarf@panix.com wrote:
>
>I haven't got a clue what you mean, so I'll concede that round.
My apologies for being obscure... 'Goedel-tightening stretch' is a
reference to Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem (and a pun on the homonymity
of Goedel and girdle).
Zen is a product of a philosophical system which did not include the
Aristotelean Principle of Non-Contradiction (loosely put, 'A thing cannot
both be and not-be the same thing in regards to the same aspect at the
same time')... and in that logic is a game played by a series of rules
(Wittgenstein) then to judge the logical game (Zen) by a rule outside of
its system (Non-Contradiction) might be similar, say, to judging a game of
Patience (classic Solitaire) by the rules of Whist.
Russell, on the other hand, *is* a product of a system based upon the
Principle of Non-Contradiction... so to say that a set can be defined to
include sets which, by definition, are excluded might seem to be a
violation of that rule... but I'm sure that Greater Minds Than Mine have
addressed this matter.
DD
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