Yes. The exception to this rule is that it has no exception.
Rule 37: There are no exceptions.
This raises another more intriguing theorem, that something must have an exception to be considered a rule.
UPDATE: Rule 37 Paragraph A states that where the exception BECOMES the rule, then Rule 37 no longer applies and Paragraphs B and C apply.
Paragraph B: There is always a rule to every exception.
Paragraph C: Try sticking your head in a bucket of water to deal with this.
UPDATE TO THE UPDATE: The rule in paragraph validates the rule to rule 37 stating that every rule must have an exception because the exception to rule 37 is that there is no exception to rule 37 only if this exception amends the rule in which it does not.
The truth of the matter is that there is an exception to almost every rule, mainly because otherwise the exception to this rule would create a paradoxical statement bound by circular logic and reasoning that would create and infinite loop resulting in the formation of a mental vortex equivalent to a black hole from which there is no escape.
There is, to about every rule but this one.
The Castle Doctrine is an exception to a rule in place in some jurisdictions that requires a defendant to retreat before using deadly force in self-defense. The castle exception states that if a defendant is in his home, he is not required to retreat prior to using deadly force in self defense.
Because it's not scientific, its actually an very old legal principle.
Every stanza must have four lines
The most famous and lasting reform Julius Caesar introduced was a new calendar which, with the exception of one day every century, is still used by everyone in the world today.
There is only one convention which Shakespeare adheres to, and that is the convention that the characters onstage at the end of a scene cannot come on to start the next scene. The only exception to this rule is Scenes 1 and 2 of Act 2 of Romeo and Juliet.
2 is the exception to the rule that every prime number is odd
Not EVERY rule, but most of them. Hence the saying, 'the exception that proves the rule.'
Hydrogen
In French grammar, the rule is that there is an exception to every rule, except the rule that says there is an exception to every rule.- Rule about adjectives: they can take the mark of the plural or the mark of the feminine. That rule applies to color adjectives.- Exception: adjectives formed from animal names (saumon, tourterelle,...), mineral names (turquoise, anthracite,...), vegetal names, : marron (chestnut), noisette (hazelnut), orange, ect.. etc... These names do not vary when they are used as color adjectives (list in link)- Exception to the exceptions: rose, écarlate, fauve, pourpre... answer to the general rule.
The duration of Exception to the Rule is 1.63 hours.
Majority rule
Exception to the Rule was created on 1997-04-05.
Rules apply to everyone, so when someone says, "You're no exception" or "You're no exception to the rule", they mean "The rule applies to everyone, even to you."
Because there's a rule for every exception to the previous rules that has come up.
Water is the substance that is an exception to this rule. Although most other substance follow this rule, the hydrogen bond in water is the characteristic associated with this exception.
The opposite of exception is inclusion.(In categorization or regulation, the exception is the opposite of the rule.)
The word "weird" is an exception to the rule "i before e except after c".