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sorites

The sorites paradox is a family of philosophical puzzles about vague predicates, traditionally illustrated by questions about heaps and other borderline cases. The term comes from Greek soros, meaning “heap,” and the paradox is associated with Eubulides of Miletus, a 4th century BCE Greek philosopher who introduced several sorites-like arguments. The core idea is that a chain of small, seemingly harmless steps can lead from a clearly true premise to an apparently false conclusion, challenging how we apply binary predicates to vague concepts.

A classic formulation involves a heap of sand. If removing one grain from a heap yields another

The paradox highlights the problem of vagueness in language and logic. Responses include supervaluationism, which allows

heap,
and
if
this
step
can
be
repeated,
then
after
removing
many
grains
one
by
one,
we
would
still
have
a
heap,
contradicting
the
idea
that
eventually
we
no
longer
have
a
heap.
A
related
version
uses
baldness:
if
removing
a
single
hair
does
not
make
a
man
non-bald,
repeated
removals
should
not
turn
a
bald
man
into
a
non-bald,
yet
a
sequence
of
removals
can
produce
a
bald
individual
from
a
non-bald
starting
point.
These
examples
illustrate
a
basic
tension
between
intuitive
judgments
about
vague
terms
and
the
rules
of
logical
deduction.
for
truth
to
depend
on
precise
but
unarticulated
interpretations;
epistemic
theories,
which
posit
sharp
boundaries
that
are
simply
unknown;
and
approaches
such
as
fuzzy
logic
or
gradualist
and
contextualist
theories,
which
allow
degrees
or
context-dependent
thresholds.
The
sorites
remains
central
to
debates
on
how
language
maps
to
the
world
and
to
questions
about
rational
argument
in
the
presence
of
vague
concepts.