英:[ˈpærədɒks]
美:[ˈpærədɑːks]
英:[ˈpærədɒks]
美:[ˈpærədɑːks]
par·a·dox
pae r daks
复数:paradoxes
paradoxical (adj.), paradoxically (adv.)
noun
one (such as a person, situation, or action) having seemingly contradictory qualities or phases
a statement that is seemingly contradictory or opposed to common sense and yet is perhaps true
a self-contradictory statement that at first seems true
an argument that apparently derives self-contradictory conclusions by valid deduction from acceptable premises
a tenet contrary to received opinion
1530年代,“与普遍信念或期望相反的陈述”,源自法语 paradoxe(14世纪),直接源自拉丁语 paradoxum “悖论,看似荒谬但实际上是真实的陈述”,源自希腊语 paradoxon “难以置信的陈述或观点”,中性形容词 paradoxos “与预期相反的,难以置信的”,由前缀 para- “相反”(见 para-(1))和 doxa “观点”组成,源自 dokein “出现,似乎,思考”(源自 PIE 词根 *dek- “接受,认可”)。
最初具有“荒谬,奇幻”的概念。意思是“看似自相矛盾但不是不合逻辑或明显不真实的陈述”,始于1560年代。具体而言,在逻辑学中,“从可接受的前提出发,经过合理推理,却导致不合逻辑的结论的陈述或命题”,始于1903年。
反论,奇论,自相矛盾,奇异现象:一种状态,似乎是(其实也可能不是)荒唐可笑或自我矛盾的
悖论
悖论
佯谬
Latin paradoxum, from Greek paradoxon, from neuter of paradoxos contrary to expectation, from para- + dokein to think, seem — more at decent
The first known use of paradox was in 1540
paragraph1 of 2noun
a part of a writing or speech that develops in an organized manner one point of a subject or gives the words of one speaker
a short written article (as in a newspaper) complete in one section
paragraph2 of 2verb
to divide into or write paragraphs
paragonnoun
a model of excellence or perfection
paraffinnoun
a flammable waxy substance obtained from wood, coal, or petroleum and used chiefly in coating and sealing, in candles, and in drugs and cosmetics
paraffinnoun
a flammable waxy substance obtained from wood, coal, or petroleum and used chiefly in coating and sealing, in candles, and in drugs and cosmetics
paradoxnoun
a statement that seems to go against common sense but may still be true
a false statement that at first seems true
a person or thing having qualities that seem to be opposites
paradoxnoun
a statement that seems to go against common sense but may still be true
a false statement that at first seems true
a person or thing having qualities that seem to be opposites
paradoxnoun
an instance of a paradoxical phenomenon or reaction
1 She told Lazlo, “I feel a little like him sometimes, the love and hate side by side. It’s not easy having a paradox at the core of one’s own being.”
2 A wormhole is a paradox caused by a zero in the equations of general relativity.
3 Can Hobbes explain this paradox?
霍布斯能解释这个悖论吗?
4 These paradoxes hint that China too was once diverse, as all other populous nations still are.
5 “So a Socratic paradox is about something that probably isn’t true, but you make it sound true?”
6 This was a shocking conclusion, but the indivisible kernels of matter in atomic theory got around the problem of Zeno’s paradoxes.
7 Perhaps the greatest paradox concerned his feelings about money.
8 The theory neatly solves the grandfather paradox by positing separate universes in which each possible outcome exists, thereby avoiding a paradox.
9 Another paradox lies in the physics of the sport.
10 Zeno really did believe that motion was impossible, and his paradox was this theory's chief support.
11 I'm writing because Paradox Achievements and Paradox Connect was an initiative started by us.
我在写,因为连接的悖论与悖论的成就是由我们的倡议开始.
12 How to reconcile this paradox?
如何解释这种矛盾?
13 Although I'm so successful I'm really rather a failure. That's a paradox, isn't it?
虽然我非常成功,可事实上我却是个相当失败的人。这句话自相矛盾,是吧?
14 But if we examine the possible two-man races, a paradox appears.
15 Mr. Guppy propounds for Mr. Smallweed's consideration the paradox that the more you drink the thirstier you are and reclines his head upon the window-sill in a state of hopeless languor.
16 But that conclusion presents a paradox: such diseases could never have existed before then!
17 There seem to be two possible resolutions to the paradoxes posed by time travel.
18 He seemed to absorb the baffling paradoxes of quantum theory with ease.
19 We shall first discuss a more mundane version of the twin paradox.
我们将先讨论孪生佯谬的一个比较通俗的形式.
20 It appeared to me increasingly paradoxical, and it has been my experience that when paradox crops up too often for comfort, it means that certain factors are missing in the equation.
1 反面议论
2 自相矛盾的话
3 反论
4 悖论
6 自相矛盾
7 奇谈
8 怪人
fish funny Nut freak crank oddity goon weirdo oddball nutter crackpot wack kook mentalist coot nutso ding-a-ling ratbag cot-case crotcheteer one case card character fruit bird screw personality crack nut cure quiz specimen squirrel eccentric queer lunatic spook hairpin dork geezer fruitcake goofball codger spaz zombi weirdy galoot Bandersnatch cueball