Michael’s Maxim: There Are No True Paradoxes
Michael’s Maxim: There Are No True Paradoxes
By Michael Haimes
Maxim:
“There are no true paradoxes; every paradox is resolvable through proper analysis.”
Premise 1: Paradoxes arise when logical systems contain unresolved contradictions in time, category, or language.
Premise 2: Classical paradoxes like the Liar’s Paradox, Russell’s Paradox, and the Grandfather Paradox rely on misapplied context or incomplete frameworks.
Premise 3: Through deeper analysis and context reconstruction, all known paradoxes can be resolved or clarified.
Premise 4: Apparent paradoxes are intellectual invitations, not irreconcilable truths.
Premise 5: Belief in paradox as a permanent feature of reality distorts truth and creates false limits.
Conclusion:
There are no true paradoxes. Only unexamined contradictions. Michael’s Maxim is a foundation for philosophical precision, logic restoration, and spiritual coherence.
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