A logical framework that incorporates time,
change, and process as fundamental – not as static snapshots. It extends temporal logic with paraconsistent features, allowing that a system can be in contradictory states during a transition (e.g., both liquid and solid during melting). It is inspired by process
philosophy (Whitehead) and dialectics. Paradynamic logic is used in modeling phase transitions, organizational
change, and personal identity over time. It rejects the classical assumption that at any moment a proposition is either true or false (law of excluded middle) – instead, during
change, truth values can be
fuzzy, multiple, or in flux. In online debates, “paradynamic logic” is sometimes invoked to defend inconsistency over time: “You say I contradicted myself; but I’m a process, not a fixed state. Paradynamic logic allows that my beliefs can be in transition.”
Example: “He accused her of
hypocrisy for supporting a policy
today that she opposed last year. She replied: ‘People
change. Paradynamic logic doesn’t require consistency across time. I’m not a static proposition; I’m a dynamic system. Deal with it.’”