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Self-contradictory   /sɛlf-kˌɑntrədˈɪktəri/   Listen
Self-contradictory

adjective
1.
Seemingly contradictory but nonetheless possibly true.  Synonym: paradoxical.
2.
In disagreement.  Synonyms: at odds, conflicting, contradictory.  "Contradictory attributes of unjust justice and loving vindictiveness"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Self-contradictory" Quotes from Famous Books



... brings me at last to a cardinal fact in the constitution of deserts which is almost always utterly misconceived in Europe. Most people at home picture the desert to themselves as wholly dead, flat, and sandy. To talk about the fauna and flora of Sahara sounds in their ears like self-contradictory nonsense. But, as a matter of fact, that uniform and lifeless desert of the popular fancy exists only in those sister arts that George II.—good, practical man—so heartily despised, 'boetry and bainting.' The desert of real life, though less impressive, is far more ...
— Falling in Love - With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science • Grant Allen

... conception of any environment at all, and consequently could have no recognition of our own existence. The confusion of thought involved even in the attempt to state such a condition shows it to be perfectly inconceivable, for the simple reason that it is self-contradictory and self-destructive. On this account it is clear that our own existence and that of the world around us necessarily implies the presence of a Universal Mind acting on certain fixed lines of its own which establish the basis for the working of all individual minds. This paramount action ...
— The Creative Process in the Individual • Thomas Troward

... excite, or be capable of exciting, any sensations or states of consciousness: no matter what, but it is indispensable that there should be some. It was from overlooking this that Hegel, finding that Being is an abstraction reached by thinking away all particular attributes, arrived at the self-contradictory proposition on which he founded all his philosophy, that Being is the same as Nothing. It is really the name of Something, taken in the most ...
— A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive • John Stuart Mill

... out of reach, out of the question; not to be had, not to be thought of; beyond control; desperate &c. (hopeless) 859; incompatible &c. 24; inaccessible, uncomeatable[obs3], impassable, impervious, innavigable[obs3], inextricable; self-contradictory. out of one's power, beyond one's power, beyond one's depth, beyond one's reach, beyond one's grasp; too much for; ultra crepidam[Lat]. Phr. the grapes are sour; non possumus[Lat]; non nostrum tantas componere ...
— Roget's Thesaurus

... part, or outside of it as its cause. Proof. Of unconditionally necessary existence within the world there can be none. The assumption of a first unconditioned link in the chain of cosmical conditions is self-contradictory. For such link or cause, being in time, must be subject to the law of all temporal existence, and so be determined—contrary to the original assumption—by another ...
— The World's Greatest Books--Volume 14--Philosophy and Economics • Various


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