Ask Question
12 June, 14:25

What does the sorites paradox tell? (A) There no future heaps. (B) A heap from which a grain has been taken remains a heap. (C) A heap contains all grains which do not contain themselves. (D) A heap cannot lie. (E) Heaps are creaps.

+5
Answers (1)
  1. 12 June, 14:47
    0
    Answer: B

    Explanation: The sorities paradox states "A heap from which a grain has been taken remains a heap".

    The sorites paradox first originated in an ancient puzzle which uses vague terms, viz., terms with unclear ("blurred" or "fuzzy") boundaries of application and meanings. In this case the predicate 'heap' has unclear boundaries and can be interpreted by whoever reads it due to the fact that a boundary has not been set. A heap could mean an actual heap for someone and for another person it could mean problems, money fro example. The reader sets the boundary on what the predicate means to him or her.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “What does the sorites paradox tell? (A) There no future heaps. (B) A heap from which a grain has been taken remains a heap. (C) A heap ...” in 📙 English if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers