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The sorites paradox (), sometimes known as the paradox of the heap, is a
paradox A paradox is a logically self-contradictory statement or a statement that runs contrary to one's expectation. It is a statement that, despite apparently valid reasoning from true or apparently true premises, leads to a seemingly self-contradictor ...
that results from vague predicates. A typical formulation involves a heap of sand, from which grains are removed individually. With the assumption that removing a single grain does not cause a heap not to be considered a heap anymore, the paradox is to consider what happens when the process is repeated enough times that only one grain remains and if it is still a heap. If not, then the question asks when it changed from a heap to a non-heap.


Original formulation

The word ''sorites'' () derives from the Greek word for ''heap'' (). The paradox is so named because of its original characterization, attributed to Eubulides of Miletus. The paradox is as follows: consider a heap of sand from which
grain A grain is a small, hard, dry fruit (caryopsis) – with or without an attached husk, hull layer – harvested for human or animal consumption. A grain crop is a grain-producing plant. The two main types of commercial grain crops are cereals and ...
s are removed individually. One might construct the argument from the following
premise A premise or premiss is a proposition—a true or false declarative statement—used in an argument to prove the truth of another proposition called the conclusion. Arguments consist of a set of premises and a conclusion. An argument is meaningf ...
s: :'' grains of sand is a heap of sand'' (Premise 1) :''A heap of sand minus one grain is still a heap.'' (Premise 2) Repeated applications of premise 2 (each time starting with one fewer grain) eventually forces one to accept the conclusion that a heap may be composed of just one grain of sand. Read (1995) observes that "the argument is itself a heap, or sorites, of steps of ''
modus ponens In propositional logic, (; MP), also known as (), implication elimination, or affirming the antecedent, is a deductive argument form and rule of inference. It can be summarized as "''P'' implies ''Q.'' ''P'' is true. Therefore, ''Q'' must ...
''":Read, Stephen (1995). ''Thinking About Logic'', p.174. Oxford. . :'' grains is a heap.'' :''If grains is a heap then grains is a heap.'' :''So grains is a heap.'' :''If grains is a heap then grains is a heap.'' :''So grains is a heap.'' :''If ...'' :''... So grain is a heap.'' One grain of sand is not considered to be a heap of sand. So the argument, although seeming valid and with plausible premises, has a false conclusion, which makes it a paradox, according to a popular (though not universally accepted) academic definition of "paradox".


Variations

There are many variations of the sorites paradox, some of which allow consideration of the difference between "being" and "seeming", that is, between a question of fact and a question of perception; this may be seen to be relevant when the argument hinges on each change being "imperceptible". Another formulation is to start with a grain of sand, which is clearly not a heap, and then assume that adding a single grain of sand to something that is not a heap does not cause it to become a heap. Inductively, this process can be repeated as much as one wants without ever constructing a heap. A more natural formulation of this variant is to assume a set of colored chips exists such that two adjacent chips vary in color too little for human eyesight to be able to distinguish between them. Then by induction on this premise, humans would not be able to distinguish between any colors. The removal of one drop from the ocean, will not make it "not an ocean" (it is still an ocean), but since the volume of water in the ocean is finite, eventually, after enough removals, even a litre of water left is still an ocean. This paradox can be reconstructed for a variety of predicates, for example, with "tall", "rich", "old", "blue", "bald", and so on. The version about baldness, where it is argued that adding a single hair does not make a bald man no longer bald, is known as the "falakros", from the Greek for "bald" (φαλακρός).
Bertrand Russell Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell, (18 May 1872 – 2 February 1970) was a British philosopher, logician, mathematician, and public intellectual. He had influence on mathematics, logic, set theory, and various areas of analytic ...
argued that all of natural language, even logical connectives, is vague; moreover, representations of propositions are vague.


General conditional sorites

A formal generalization of the paradoxical sorites argument is as follows: :''Fa_''. :''If Fa_, then Fa_.'' :''If Fa_, then Fa_.'' :''\vdots'' :''If Fa_, then Fa_.'' :''\overline'' (where n can be arbitrarily large) This formalization is in
first-order logic First-order logic, also called predicate logic, predicate calculus, or quantificational logic, is a collection of formal systems used in mathematics, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science. First-order logic uses quantified variables over ...
, where F is a predicate and a_, a_, a_, \ldots, a_ are different subjects to which it may be applied; for each subject a_, the notation Fa_ signifies the application of the predicate F to a_, i.e., the proposition that "a_ is F". ( Jonathan Barnes originally represented each "if Fa_, then Fa_" proposition using the symbol \supset for the material implication connective, so his argument originally ended with Fa_ \supset Fa_.) Jonathan Barnes has discovered the conditions for an argument of this general form to be soritical. First, the series \langle a_, . . . , a_ \rangle must be ordered; for example, heaps may be ordered according to number of grains of sand in them, or, in the ''falakros'' version (see ), heads may be ordered according to the number of hairs on them. Second, the predicate F must be ''soritical relative to the series'' \langle a_, . . . , a_ \rangle, which means: first, that it is, to all appearances, true of a_, the first item in the series; second, that it is, to all appearances, false of a_, the last item in the series; and third, that all adjacent pairs of subjects in the series, a_ and a_, are, to all appearances, so similar as to be indiscriminable in respect of F – that is, it must seem that either both of a_ and a_ satisfy F, or neither do. This last condition on the predicate is what Crispin Wright called the predicate's ''tolerance'' of small degrees of change, and which he considered a condition of a predicate's being vague. As Wright said, supposing that \phi is a concept related to a predicate F such that "any object which F characterizes may be changed into one which it does not simply by sufficient change in respect of \phi", then "F is ''tolerant'' with respect to \phi if there is also some positive degree of change in respect of \phi insufficient ever to affect the justice with which F applies to a particular case."


Proposed resolutions


Denying the existence of heaps

One may object to the first premise by denying that grains of sand make a heap. But is just an arbitrary large number, and the argument will apply with any such number. So the response must deny outright that there are such things as heaps. Peter Unger defends this solution. However, A. J. Ayer repudiated it when presented with it by Unger: "If we regard everything as being composed of atoms, and think of Unger as consisting not of cells but of the atoms which compose the cells, then, as David Wiggins has pointed out to me, a similar argument could be used to prove that Unger, so far from being non-existent, is identical with everything that there is. We have only to substitute for the premise that the subtraction of one atom from Unger's body never makes any difference to his existence the premise that the addition of one atom to it never makes any difference either."


Setting a fixed boundary

A common first response to the paradox is to term any set of grains that has more than a certain number of grains in it a heap. If one were to define the "fixed boundary" at grains then one would claim that for fewer than , it is not a heap; for or more, then it is a heap. Collins argues that such solutions are unsatisfactory as there seems little significance to the difference between grains and grains. The boundary, wherever it may be set, remains arbitrary, and so its precision is misleading. It is objectionable on both philosophical and linguistic grounds: the former on account of its arbitrariness and the latter on the ground that it is simply not how natural language is used.


Unknowable boundaries (or epistemicism)

Timothy Williamson and Roy Sorensen claim that there are fixed boundaries but that they are necessarily unknowable.


Supervaluationism

Supervaluationism is a method for dealing with irreferential singular terms and
vagueness In linguistics and philosophy, a vague predicate is one which gives rise to borderline cases. For example, the English adjective "tall" is vague since it is not clearly true or false for someone of middling height. By contrast, the word " prime" ...
. It allows one to retain the usual tautological laws even when dealing with undefined truth values. An example of a proposition about an irreferential singular term is the sentence "''
Pegasus Pegasus (; ) is a winged horse in Greek mythology, usually depicted as a white stallion. He was sired by Poseidon, in his role as horse-god, and foaled by the Gorgon Medusa. Pegasus was the brother of Chrysaor, both born from Medusa's blood w ...
likes licorice''". Since the name "''Pegasus''" fails to refer, no
truth value In logic and mathematics, a truth value, sometimes called a logical value, is a value indicating the relation of a proposition to truth, which in classical logic has only two possible values ('' true'' or '' false''). Truth values are used in ...
can be assigned to the sentence; there is nothing in the myth that would justify any such assignment. However, there are some statements about Pegasus which have definite truth values nevertheless, such as "''Pegasus likes licorice or Pegasus doesn't like licorice''". This sentence is an instance of the tautology "p \vee \neg p", i.e. the valid schema "''p or not-p''". According to supervaluationism, it should be true regardless of whether or not its components have a truth value. By admitting sentences without defined truth values, supervaluationism avoids adjacent cases such that grains of sand is a heap of sand, but grains is not; for example, "'' grains of sand is a heap''" may be considered a border case having no defined truth value. Nevertheless, supervaluationism is able to handle a sentence like "'' grains of sand is a heap or grains of sand is not a heap''" as a tautology, i.e. to assign it the value ''true''.


Mathematical explanation

Let v be a classical valuation defined on every atomic sentence of the language L, and let At(x) be the number of distinct atomic sentences in x. Then for every sentence x, at most 2^ distinct classical valuations can exist. A supervaluation V is a function from sentences to truth values such that, a sentence x is super-true (i.e. V(x) = \text) if and only if v(x) = \text for every classical valuation v; likewise for super-false. Otherwise, V(x) is undefined—i.e. exactly when there are two classical valuations v and v' such that v(x)=\text and v'(x) = \text. For example, let L \; p be the formal translation of "''Pegasus likes licorice''". Then there are exactly two classical valuations v and v' on L \; p, viz. v(L \; p) = \text and v'(L \; p) = \text. So L \; p is neither super-true nor super-false. However, the tautology L \; p \lor \lnot L \; p is evaluated to \text by every classical valuation; it is hence super-true. Similarly, the formalization of the above heap proposition H \; 1000 is neither super-true nor super-false, but H \; 1000 \lor \lnot H \; 1000 is super-true.


Truth gaps, gluts, and multi-valued logics

Another method is to use a
multi-valued logic Many-valued logic (also multi- or multiple-valued logic) is a propositional calculus in which there are more than two truth values. Traditionally, in Aristotle's logical calculus, there were only two possible values (i.e., "true" and "false") ...
. In this context, the problem is with the principle of bivalence: the sand is either a heap or is not a heap, without any shades of gray. Instead of two logical states, ''heap'' and ''not-heap'', a three value system can be used, for example ''heap'', ''indeterminate'' and ''not-heap''. A response to this proposed solution is that three valued systems do not truly resolve the paradox as there is still a dividing line between ''heap'' and ''indeterminate'' and also between ''indeterminate'' and ''not-heap''. The third truth-value can be understood either as a ''truth-value gap'' or as a ''truth-value glut''. Alternatively,
fuzzy logic Fuzzy logic is a form of many-valued logic in which the truth value of variables may be any real number between 0 and 1. It is employed to handle the concept of partial truth, where the truth value may range between completely true and completely ...
offers a continuous spectrum of logical states represented in the
unit interval In mathematics, the unit interval is the closed interval , that is, the set of all real numbers that are greater than or equal to 0 and less than or equal to 1. It is often denoted ' (capital letter ). In addition to its role in real analysi ...
of real numbers ,1��it is a many-valued logic with infinitely-many truth-values, and thus the sand transitions gradually from "definitely heap" to "definitely not heap", with shades in the intermediate region. Fuzzy hedges are used to divide the continuum into regions corresponding to classes like ''definitely heap'', ''mostly heap'', ''partly heap'', ''slightly heap'', and ''not heap''. Though the problem remains of where these borders occur; e.g. at what number of grains sand starts being ''definitely'' a heap.


Hysteresis

Another method, introduced by Raffman, is to use
hysteresis Hysteresis is the dependence of the state of a system on its history. For example, a magnet may have more than one possible magnetic moment in a given magnetic field, depending on how the field changed in the past. Plots of a single component of ...
, that is, knowledge of what the collection of sand started as. Equivalent amounts of sand may be termed heaps or not based on how they got there. If a large heap (indisputably described as a heap) is diminished slowly, it preserves its "heap status" to a point, even as the actual amount of sand is reduced to a smaller number of grains. For example, grains is a pile and grains is a heap. There will be an overlap for these states. So if one is reducing it from a heap to a pile, it is a heap going down until . At that point, one would stop calling it a heap and start calling it a pile. But if one replaces one grain, it would not instantly turn back into a heap. When going up it would remain a pile until grains. The numbers picked are arbitrary; the point is, that the same amount can be either a heap or a pile depending on what it was before the change. A common use of hysteresis would be the thermostat for air conditioning: the AC is set at 77 °F and it then cools the air to just below 77 °F, but does not activate again instantly when the air warms to 77.001 °F—it waits until almost 78 °F, to prevent instant change of state over and over again.


Group consensus

One can establish the meaning of the word ''heap'' by appealing to consensus. Williamson, in his epistemic solution to the paradox, assumes that the meaning of vague terms must be determined by group usage. The consensus method typically claims that a collection of grains is as much a "heap" as the proportion of people in a group who believe it to be so. In other words, the ''
probability Probability is a branch of mathematics and statistics concerning events and numerical descriptions of how likely they are to occur. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and 1; the larger the probability, the more likely an e ...
'' that any collection is considered a heap is the
expected value In probability theory, the expected value (also called expectation, expectancy, expectation operator, mathematical expectation, mean, expectation value, or first Moment (mathematics), moment) is a generalization of the weighted average. Informa ...
of the distribution of the group's opinion. A group may decide that: *One grain of sand on its own is not a heap. *A large collection of grains of sand is a heap. Between the two extremes, individual members of the group may disagree with each other over whether any particular collection can be labelled a "heap". The collection can then not be definitively claimed to ''be'' a "heap" or "not a heap". This can be considered an appeal to
descriptive linguistics In the study of language, description or descriptive linguistics is the work of objectively analyzing and describing how language is actually used (or how it was used in the past) by a speech community. François & Ponsonnet (2013). All aca ...
rather than
prescriptive linguistics Linguistic prescription is the establishment of rules defining publicly preferred Usage (language), usage of language, including rules of spelling, pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, etc. Linguistic prescriptivism may aim to establish a standard ...
, as it resolves the issue of definition based on how the population uses natural language. Indeed, if a precise prescriptive definition of "heap" is available then the group consensus will always be unanimous and the paradox does not occur.


Resolutions in utility theory

In the economics field of
utility theory In economics, utility is a measure of a certain person's satisfaction from a certain state of the world. Over time, the term has been used with at least two meanings. * In a Normative economics, normative context, utility refers to a goal or ob ...
, the sorites paradox arises when a person's preferences patterns are investigated. As an example by Robert Duncan Luce, it is easy to find a person, say, Peggy, who prefers in her coffee 3 grams (that is, 1 cube) of sugar to 15 grams (5 cubes), however, she will usually be indifferent between 3.00 and 3.03 grams, as well as between 3.03 and 3.06 grams, and so on, as well as finally between 14.97 and 15.00 grams. Here: p.179 Two measures were taken by economists to avoid the sorites paradox in such a setting. *
Comparative The degrees of comparison of adjectives and adverbs are the various forms taken by adjectives and adverbs when used to compare two entities (comparative degree), three or more entities (superlative degree), or when not comparing entities (positi ...
, rather than positive, forms of properties are used. The above example deliberately does not make a statement like "Peggy likes a cup of coffee with 3 grams of sugar", or "Peggy does not like a cup of coffee with 15 grams of sugar". Instead, it states "Peggy likes a cup of coffee with 3 grams of sugar more than one with 15 grams of sugar". * Economists distinguish preference ("Peggy likes ... more than ...") from indifference ("Peggy likes ... as much as ... "), and do not consider the latter relation to be transitive. In the above example, abbreviating "a cup of coffee with x grams of sugar" by "''c''''x''", and "Peggy is indifferent between ''c''''x'' and ''c''''y''" as the facts and and ... and do not imply Several kinds of relations were introduced to describe preference and indifference without running into the sorites paradox. Luce defined semi-orders and investigated their mathematical properties;
Amartya Sen Amartya Kumar Sen (; born 3 November 1933) is an Indian economist and philosopher. Sen has taught and worked in England and the United States since 1972. In 1998, Sen received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his contributions ...
performed a similar task for quasitransitive relations. Abbreviating "Peggy likes ''c''''x'' more than ''c''''y''" as and abbreviating or by it is reasonable that the relation ">" is a semi-order while ≥ is quasitransitive. Conversely, from a given semi-order > the indifference relation ≈ can be reconstructed by defining if neither nor Similarly, from a given quasitransitive relation ≥ the indifference relation ≈ can be reconstructed by defining if both and These reconstructed ≈ relations are usually not transitive. The table to the right shows how the above color example can be modelled as a quasi-transitive relation ≥. Color differences overdone for readability. A color ''X'' is said to be more or equally red than a color ''Y'' if the table cell in row ''X'' and column ''Y'' is not empty. In that case, if it holds a "≈", then ''X'' and ''Y'' look indistinguishably equal, and if it holds a ">", then ''X'' looks clearly more red than ''Y''. The relation ≥ is the disjoint union of the symmetric relation ≈ and the transitive relation >. Using the transitivity of >, the knowledge of both > and > allows one to infer that > . However, since ≥ is not transitive, a "paradoxical" inference like " ≥ and ≥ , hence ≥ " is no longer possible. For the same reason, e.g. " ≈ and ≈ , hence ≈ " is no longer a valid inference. Similarly, to resolve the original heap variation of the paradox with this approach, the relation "''X'' grains are more a heap than ''Y'' grains" could be considered quasitransitive rather than transitive.


Continuum fallacy

The continuum fallacy (also known as the fallacy of the beard, line-drawing fallacy, or decision-point fallacy) is an
informal fallacy Informal fallacies are a type of incorrect argument in natural language. The source of the error is not just due to the ''form'' of the argument, as is the case for formal fallacies, but can also be due to their ''content'' and ''context''. Fallac ...
related to the sorites paradox. Both fallacies cause one to erroneously reject a vague claim simply because it is not as precise as one would like it to be. Vagueness alone does not necessarily imply invalidity. The fallacy is the argument that two states or conditions cannot be considered distinct (or do not
exist eXist-db (or eXist for short) is an open source software project for NoSQL databases built on XML technology. It is classified as both a NoSQL document-oriented database system and a native XML database (and it provides support for XML, JSON, HTM ...
at all) because between them there exists a continuum of states. Strictly, the sorites paradox refers to situations where there are many ''discrete'' states (classically between 1 and 1,000,000 grains of sand, hence 1,000,000 possible states), while the continuum fallacy refers to situations where there is (or appears to be) a ''continuum'' of states, such as temperature. For the purpose of the continuum fallacy, one assumes that there is in fact a continuum, though this is generally a minor distinction: in general, any argument against the sorites paradox can also be used against the continuum fallacy. One argument against the fallacy is based on the simple
counterexample A counterexample is any exception to a generalization. In logic a counterexample disproves the generalization, and does so rigorously in the fields of mathematics and philosophy. For example, the fact that "student John Smith is not lazy" is a c ...
: there do exist bald people and people who are not bald. Another argument is that for each degree of change in states, the degree of the condition changes slightly, and these slight changes build up to shift the state from one category to another. For example, perhaps the addition of a grain of rice causes the total group of rice to be "slightly more" of a heap, and enough slight changes will certify the group's heap status – see
fuzzy logic Fuzzy logic is a form of many-valued logic in which the truth value of variables may be any real number between 0 and 1. It is employed to handle the concept of partial truth, where the truth value may range between completely true and completely ...
.


See also

*
Ambiguity Ambiguity is the type of meaning (linguistics), meaning in which a phrase, statement, or resolution is not explicitly defined, making for several interpretations; others describe it as a concept or statement that has no real reference. A com ...
* Boiling frog * Closed concept *
Fuzzy concept A fuzzy concept is an idea of which the boundaries of application can vary considerably according to context or conditions, instead of being fixed once and for all. This means the idea is somewhat vague or imprecise. Yet it is not unclear or mean ...
*
I know it when I see it The phrase "I know it when I see it" was used in 1964 by United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart to describe his threshold test for obscenity in '' Jacobellis v. Ohio''. In explaining why the material at issue in the case was not obsce ...
* Imprecise language * List of fallacies * Loki's wager *
Ring species In biology, a ring species is a connected series of neighbouring populations, each of which interbreeds with closely sited related populations, but for which there exist at least two "end populations" in the series, which are too distantly relate ...
*
Ship of Theseus The Ship of Theseus, also known as Theseus's Paradox, is a paradox and a common thought experiment about whether an object is the same object after having all of its original components replaced over time, typically one after the other. In Gre ...
*
Slippery slope In a slippery slope argument, a course of action is rejected because the slippery slope advocate believes it will lead to a chain reaction resulting in an undesirable end or ends. The core of the slippery slope argument is that a specific decisi ...
* Straw that broke the camel's back


References


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * * *; Sect.3


External links

* by Dominic Hyde. * Sandra LaFave
Open and Closed Concepts and the Continuum Fallacy
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sorites Paradox Logical paradoxes Semantics Ambiguity