A paradox is the use of words that make up a sentence and they have contradictory concepts, however, it protects the phrase valid and is not far from reality, that is, it is a sentence whose main protagonist is the rhetoric created by the execution of words that contradict the subsequent one in the same sentence.
For example, the following phrases can be mentioned "for the day to pass quickly, it is best to do chores slowly" or "the rich tend to be poor in soul" , "trying to do good succeeded in generating evil" , "do not clarify that darkens ” and so on, sentences where people express themselves by joining words that contradict each other in the same sentence.
There are many types of paradoxes that can be applied when establishing a conversation with two or more individuals, in a listed way they would be the following:
Antinomies: they are paradoxes created through words that execute a “self-contradiction” in a specific sentence such as “ of the pessimists turns out to be the most optimistic "or" being superstitious causes bad luck "and" all I know is that I know nothing "," They have to kill all murderers "or similar sentences.
Conditionals: these types of paradoxes are used to leave a question in the reader or listener, giving the reader or listener the ability to create an assumption, such as: "Who was the chicken or the egg first?", If a snake begins to consume its own cola. Would it eat whole ?. Definition: they are paradoxes that at first seem to give a concept of something or some situation, however the explanation is ambiguous and is not clear. "I want to marry a tall white man, but I like Juan who is dark and short. "
Truthful: they are the type of paradox that, when heard or read first-hand, turn out to be absurd but that does not take away from reality, for example “two people meet at the same meeting and have their birthday on the same day”, “Manuel is 22 years old and it has only been able to celebrate its thirteenth anniversary ”or“ without knowing the truth, it was right in the events reported ”.