Beethoven, the person and the movement, is known as a romantic paradox.
This particular romantic paradox is the simultaneous emotion of wanting to see Beethoven triumph and be forever immortalized by a monument in Bonn, and the plethora of overenthusiastic followers at the time who had transformed the Beethoven paradigm into something banal, thus the act of erecting a statue in his honor would only serve to further this banality.
paradox
References to what is now known as Olbers' Paradox date back to the 1500s. This paradox has come up periodically in history. In 1929, Edwin Hubble discovered that the universe is expanding, which offers an explanation to the paradox. Prior to this, any hypotheses were quickly dismissed.
Dolphins are known to be romantic and kind
Galileo Galilei lived from 1564 to 1642. His work on what is known as Galileo's Paradox was done from around 1592 to 1610 at the University of Padua where he taught.
This statement is a classic paradox known as the "liar paradox." It is a self-referential statement that creates a logical contradiction. The statement cannot be definitively true or false, as it contradicts itself.
paradox = paradoha (however, the English word "paradox" is more common).
What you may be referring to is the Archer's paradox. This is when an arrow is loosed from a stave that doesn't have a cutout to hold the arrow (a.k.a arrow shelf). The arrow is pushed away from the stave and thus creates what's known as the Archer's paradox, where you have to compensate for the sideways off-shoot created by this effect.
This statement creates a paradox known as the liar paradox. If everything you say is a lie, then the statement itself is a lie, meaning that not everything you say is necessarily a lie. This paradox highlights the limitations of self-referential statements.
"Paradox" is a noun.
fermi paradox is very confusing. We can not explain that Paradox.
You Become Barney
This is a philosophical paradox known as the "omnipotence paradox." It questions the logical compatibility of omnipotence (being all-powerful). Different interpretations and arguments exist to address or explain this paradox, depending on one's beliefs and understanding of God's nature.