What is the Law of Non-Contradiction?

The purpose of this post is to explain more technically why a Christian cannot be both a Christian and a Marxist; why a non-atheist cannot be an atheist at the same time.

The definition below is the most easy to understand of the dozen or so that I checked. It is less technical.

Below it, a definition from Ligonier Ministries is pasted in and also a video on the topic.

If you view them, then you will find that the post-modern aspects of our culture violate this law; also the LGBTQ movement, particularly trans, violate this law.

From the website, Philosophy Terms:  https://philosophyterms.com/law-of-non-contradiction/

Law of Non-Contradiction

Definition of the Law of Non-Contradiction

The Law of Non-Contradiction is a straightforward but powerful idea in logic. Imagine you have a piece of chocolate. The Law of Non-Contradiction says that the chocolate cannot be both in your hand and not in your hand at the exact same moment, when you’re considering the same situation. This is a simple definition that points out that things can’t both be and not be at the same time and in the same way.

Think about it like this: If you’re playing a game where you’re either “safe” or “out,” you can’t be both at the same time when you’re looking at the same play. If someone tries to say you’re both “safe” and “out,” they’re not making sense. The Law of Non-Contradiction helps everyone agree that something’s either one way or the other, not both, which keeps us from getting confused.

Examples of the Law of Non-Contradiction

  • If someone declared, “I am both standing up and sitting down right now,” that’s a contradiction. The Law of Non-Contradiction explains that you can’t be doing both at the exact same time in the same way.
  • In a classroom, a student cannot be marked as both present and absent for the same class period. If the school’s system shows contradictory information, they know there’s a mistake to fix.
  • During a sports game, a ball can’t be both in play and out of play at once in the same moment. The rules use the Law of Non-Contradiction to help decide the next steps in the game.

These examples show us how the Law of Non-Contradiction is a key to understanding and communicating clearly. It’s like a rule that stops us from getting tangled in statements that don’t match up.

Why is it important?

The Law of Non-Contradiction is super important because it’s one of the main tools that lets us think and talk in ways that make sense. Without it, it would be hard to agree on anything or trust what we know. For example, if you couldn’t rely on the fact that your bedroom door is either open or closed, but not both at the same time, you’d be stuck not knowing what to expect.

This law keeps our conversations and learning on track. Think about learning history—if events could both happen and not happen in the exact same way at the exact same time, then you could never be sure what really took place. Or in science, if experiments could give results that are both true and not true, then we couldn’t trust the findings to make new medicines or technology.

Implications and Applications

The use of the Law of Non-Contradiction pops up everywhere. When you argue with a friend over which movie to watch, you rely on the fact that you can’t both watch and not watch the same movie at once. This law also helps teachers mark your schoolwork—the answer you chose is either right or wrong; it can’t be both.

Picture this: You’re texting with two friends about meeting up. One says a local cafe is open, and the other says it’s closed. They can’t both be right, right? The Law of Non-Contradiction helps you figure that you need to check further because both statements can’t be true at the same time.

Comparison with Related Axioms

The Law of Non-Contradiction works alongside a couple of other main ideas in logic. The Law of Identity, for instance, tells us that things are the same as themselves, which seems pretty obvious. But when you say, “I am myself,” you’re using the Law of Identity.

Then there’s the Law of Excluded Middle, which says for any statement, either it’s true, or its opposite is true, no middle option. So, if you say “It’s either raining, or it’s not,” you’re using the Law of Excluded Middle.

Together, these three rules are like a support system that holds up the way we use logic to think and solve problems.

Origin

The Law of Non-Contradiction has been around for a super long time. A smart guy named Aristotle, from ancient Greece, was one of the first to talk about this rule. He thought it was so important that without it, you really couldn’t know anything for sure. Since then, this principle has stayed a key part of how we understand and argue about almost everything.

Controversies

Even though this law seems pretty straightforward, some thinkers over time have wondered if there are cases where things could be a bit more complicated. For example, in the wild world of tiny particles in quantum physics, things can sometimes look a little contradictory, which makes some people think maybe there could be special rules for cases like that.

And in a kind of logic called paraconsistent logic, some contradictions are OK. It doesn’t mean everything falls apart. It just means that in some very specific situations, the usual rules get a little bendy. Still, these are rare exceptions, and for everyday life, the Law of Non-Contradiction holds strong.

Related Topics

  • Dialectical Reasoning: This is when you look at ideas that seem to be opposites and try to figure out how they might actually connect or balance each other out. It’s not breaking the Law of Non-Contradiction but thinking about how different viewpoints could both offer some truth.
  • Doublethink: A term from George Orwell’s “1984,” it refers to the act of accepting two opposing beliefs at once. It’s not a good way of thinking because it ignores the Law of Non-Contradiction, which we now know is super important for clear thinking.

Other important aspects might include how computers use binary code with 1s and 0s, which relies on clear either/or logic, much like the Law of Non-Contradiction.

In conclusion, this law helps us make sense of things by making sure we don’t try to believe two opposite things at once. From having a debate to figuring out if you should grab an umbrella, it’s a guiding principle that affects all kinds of decisions and ways of thinking.

Below, logic is explained by Ligonier Ministries:

Law of Noncontradiction

“God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind. Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfill it?” (Num. 23:19).

Unfortunately, many modern Christians do not consider the mind to be all that important in the Christian life. This is largely due to the fact that many academics in the church have betrayed orthodoxy and have used their minds to mount an assault on Christian belief. In seeking to preserve the truth, many evangelicals have sought to accept Christian doctrine solely on faith. This is not necessarily unacceptable, except that they have defined faith as being incompatible with reason.

Faith and reason, however, belong together. Apart from faith, reason leads to futility. Without reason, faith becomes a blind leap that embraces contradictions. We see how this happens when people accept contradictory interpretations of Scripture as being equally true.

But God cannot contradict Himself. If He did, we could not believe what He says or know how to follow Him. If two people give a contradictory understanding of a text, either one of them is wrong or both of them are wrong. Both, however, cannot be right. Otherwise, the concept of truth loses all meaning.

God’s judgment on disobedience proves the point. God punished Adam and Eve for eating what He told them not to eat. If contradiction and truth were compatible, God could not have condemned Adam. How could God find them guilty if His prohibition against eating the fruit really could mean “do not eat the fruit” and “you may eat the fruit” at the same time and in the same sense?

God’s judgment on disobedience demonstrates that the Bible assumes the existence of one of the fundamental laws of reason, the law of noncontradiction. This law states that “A cannot be both A and non-A at the same time and in the same relationship.” In this proposition, “A” refers to an object being discussed. For example, “A” could be grasshoppers. “Non-A” refers to any other object that is not “A.” For the purpose of our example, “non-A” could be whales, tables, cars, bluebirds; anything except grasshoppers. Thus we arrive at the proposition: Grasshoppers cannot be both grasshoppers and whales (not grasshoppers) at the same time and in the same relationship.

The law of noncontradiction is vital to the intelligibility of faith and life. Without it, the concept of truth loses all meaning. Tomorrow we will explore the law further and see its use in life and theology.

Coram Deo

The Lord of the Universe is trustworthy. When He reveals Himself to us, He reveals Himself truly. If contradiction and truth could exist side by side, we would be left with a God whom we could never know or trust. Thank the Lord for His truthfulness and remember that when God tells us about Himself, He tells the truth.

Link to article: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/law-noncontradiction

Below, the law of non-contradiction is explained via video debate:

 

The Law of Non-Contradiction: Explained and Debated

From the YouTube site, Philosophy Vibe

Video-page link:  https://www.youtube.com/@PhilosophyVibe/videos

Join George and John as they discuss and debate different philosophical ideas, today they will be looking into the law of non-contradiction.

One of the fundamental laws of logic the law of non-contradiction states that contradictory properties cannot both be true at the same. Although this seems like a vital logical law does is persist universally? Watch as this is debated.

For an introduction to philosophy, check out the Philosophy Vibe paperback anthology book set available on Amazon:

Volume 1 – Philosophy of Religion https://mybook.to/philosophyvibevol1

Volume 2 – Metaphysics https://mybook.to/philosophyvibevol2

Volume 3 – Ethics and Political Philosophy https://mybook.to/philosophyvibevol3

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