How to defeat Instancology (4)
Why Paradoxes Arise and Valid Proofs Survive: An Instancological Reflection
Not all proofs are equal. Some illuminate structure; others collapse into paradox. Why? The answer lies in the distinction between representation and origin—between the mirror and the thing itself.
Valid proofs succeed not because the symbols themselves are powerful, but because they correctly reflect an underlying logical structure that already exists. These structures—belonging to the Relatively Absolute (RA)—are ontologically prior. They are not made, but mirrored. They are not spoken into being, but revealed.
Paradoxes arise when language or symbols (RR) forget their role and try to play creator. Like a mirror claiming to be the sun, or a person trying to lift themselves off the earth by their own hair, such efforts end in contradiction. This is not just a logical mistake, but an ontological one.
Instancology teaches: the human layer (AR) and the symbolic layer (RR) cannot generate the layer that makes logic possible (RA), and certainly not the unspeakable origin (AA). The ladder of being cannot be climbed from the bottom up by rearranging rungs. It must be seen as a structure, not built as a project.
To create logic from language is like trying to write the rules of chess using the pieces on the board—after the game has already begun.
Thus:
Paradoxes = misuse of RR to define RA.
Validity = accurate reflection of RA without pretension of authorship.
Creation of RA or AA = metaphysically impossible from AR or RR.
This is why Instancology sees paradoxes not as puzzles to solve but as symptoms of confusion, reminders that the layers of reality must remain distinct. Ontology, like architecture, collapses when the foundation is mistaken for the frame.