The principle that two statements can contradict each other in some dimensions of truth while aligning in others, making contradiction a matter of degree and dimension rather than an absolute. Under this law, "the economy is strong" and "the economy is weak" can both be true—strong for some people, weak for others; strong on some metrics, weak on others; strong in some regions, weak elsewhere. The contradiction isn't total; it's dimensional. The law of possible truth contradiction allows for nuanced understanding of complex realities where simple true/false binaries fail.
Example: "They argued about whether the city was safe. She said yes (her neighborhood was fine). He said no (his neighborhood had issues). Both were true—on different spectra, in different dimensions. The law of possible truth contradiction allowed them to stop fighting about who was right and start talking about why their experiences differed. Progress."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
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