Eubulides of Miletus (Ancient Greek: Εὐβουλίδης; fl. 4th century BCE) was a Greek philosopher of the Megarian school, a pupil of Euclid of Megara and a contemporary of Aristotle. He is famous for his logical paradoxes.[1]
Eubulides was a pupil of Euclid of Megara,[2] the founder of the Megarian school. He was a contemporary of Aristotle, against whom he wrote with great bitterness.[3] He taught logic to Demosthenes,[4] and he is also said to have taught Apollonius Cronus, the teacher of Diodorus Cronus, and the historian Euphantus. He may have been the author of a book about Diogenes of Sinope.[5]
Eubulides is most famous for inventing the forms of seven famous paradoxes,[2][6] some of which, however, are also ascribed to Diodorus Cronus:[7]
The first paradox (the Liar) is probably the most famous, and is similar to the famous paradox of Epimenides the Cretan. The second, third and fourth paradoxes are variants of a single paradox and relate to the problem of what it means to "know" something and the identity of objects involved in an affirmation (compare the masked-man fallacy). The fifth and sixth paradoxes are also a single paradox and is usually thought to relate to the vagueness of language.[8] The final paradox attacks presumptions involved in a proposition, and is related to the syllogistic fallacy.
These paradoxes were very well known in ancient times, some are alluded to by Eubulides' contemporary Aristotle[9] and even partially by Plato.[10] Aulus Gellius mentions how the discussion of such paradoxes was considered (for him) after-dinner entertainment at the Saturnalia,[11] but Seneca, on the other hand, considered them a waste of time: "Not to know them does no harm, and mastering them does no good."[12]