Antinomy
Antinomy
Alien and Sedition Acts
Antinomy (Greek αντι-, against, plus νομος, law, literally, the mutual incompatibility, real or apparent, of two laws) is a term used in Logic and Epistemology, which, loosely, means a Paradox or unresolvable contradiction.
The term acquired a special significance in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, who used it to describe the equally rational but contradictory results of applying to the universe of pure thought the categories or criteria of understanding proper to the universe of sensible perception or Experience (phenomena). Reason cannot here play the role of establishing rational truths because it goes beyond possible experience and is applied to the sphere of that which transcends it.
These antinomies are four--two mathematical, two dynamical--connected with
It can also be argued that antinomies do not highlight limitations in the power of logical reasoning. This is because the conclusion that there is a limitation is (supposedly) derived from the antinomy by logical reasoning; therefore any limitation in the validity of logical reasoning imposes a limitation on the conclusion that there is a limitation on logical reasoning. (This is an argument by Self-reference.) In short, in terms of the validity of logical reasoning as a whole, antinomies are self-isolating: they are like scattered discontinuities within the field of logic, incapable of casting doubt on anything else but themselves.
This carefree position is incompatible with the Principle of explosion. In Mathematical logic, antinomies are patently not self-isolating, and are usually seen as disasters for the Formal system in which they arise (as Russell's paradox in Frege's work).