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| | Insolubles |
 | | Its discovery is often credited to Eubulides the Megarian (4th century BCE), on the basis of a remark by Diogenes Laertius (Lives of the Philosophers II.108), although in fact Diogenes says only that Eubulides discussed the paradox, not that he discovered it. |
 | | 270 BCE), if we are to believe the story in Athenaeus of Naucratis's Deipnosophists IX.401e, worried so much over the Liar that he wasted away and died of insomnia, as, according to Athenaeus, his epitaph recorded: |
 | | At any event, it is clear that one of the main (and one of the few genuinely new) theories to emerge from this late period is that of John Wyclif, who wrote a Summa of Insolubles (Summa insolubilium), probably in the early 1360s, |
| plato.stanford.edu /entries/insolubles (7341 words) |
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