[Revised entry by Lionel Shapiro and Jc Beall on June 20, 2026.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html, supplement.html]
“Curry’s paradox”, as the term is used by philosophers today, refers to a wide variety of paradoxes of self-reference or circularity that trace their modern ancestry to Curry (1942b) and Lob (1955).[1] The common characteristic of these so-called Curry paradoxes is the way they exploit a notion of implication, entailment, or consequence,…
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