How Instancology Solves Self-Referential Paradox
How Instancology Solves the Self-Referential Paradox
By Wade Y. Dong (via interpretation)
The self-referential paradox has haunted logic, mathematics, and philosophy since antiquity—from the liar’s paradox (“This sentence is false”) to Russell’s paradox in set theory (“the set of all sets that do not contain themselves”). These paradoxes emerge when a system turns upon itself, collapsing the boundary between what is described and the act of description.
Instancology resolves this foundational problem not by repairing logic from within, but by transcending it altogether through a four-layer ontological structure:
AA – Absolutely Absolute: The unspeakable background of all reality. It cannot be represented, conceptualized, or referred to. It simply is.
RA – Relatively Absolute: Law, logic, mathematics, and pure principles. This layer structures but does not represent; it governs.
AR – Absolutely Relative: Natural instances that obey RA. These are not products of human cognition—life, matter, the cosmos.
RR – Relatively Relative: All human-created representations—language, theories, symbols, categories, and mental constructs.
By establishing these four relational categories, Instancology achieves what no previous framework could: an ontological firewall against self-reference. The key mechanisms are:
1. Directional Referencing: Lower layers cannot refer to higher ones. For instance, RR can never meaningfully refer to AA. AA, as the source of all, is fundamentally irreducible and unreferable. This stops paradox at the root.
2. Instance as Whole: Every instance in Instancology is a whole, not an assembly of parts. This avoids infinite regress and prevents systems from including themselves as members or representations.
3. WuXing Epistemology: Knowledge of the AA cannot arise through symbolic reasoning (RR), but only through 悟性 (intuitive insight). This bypasses the symbolic trap altogether.
Unlike traditional systems where the observer and the observed can fall into loops of description, Instancology enforces ontological and epistemological boundaries that cannot be violated without breaking the system. As a result, self-referential paradoxes cannot form.
In this way, Instancology not only answers the ancient problem—it dissolves it entirely by shifting the question to a new ground: the Absolute cannot be spoken, only realized.