Australian philosopher Graham Priest is famous for advocating Dialetheism, the view that there are true contradictions. Dialetheism goes against the law of non-contradiction. This gives rise to the non classical logical systems which had much bigger popularity in India. One of them is known as catuṣkoṭi (lat. tetralemma). Tetralemma allows the statement to be true, false, both or neither. "Tetra" comes from these four options.
Classical Aristotelian logic claims that it is impossible for the latter two options to be true. This is expressed as law of non-contradiction (statement can't be both true and false) and law of excluded middle (statement is either true or false). Both are the essence of classical logic which heavily influenced Western philosophy. Kant, Wittgenstein and Heidegger all claimed to come towards contradictions in their work and all thought that their ideas hence must be incorrect or incoherent. While I'm not sure whether dialetheism holds a solution in their case, I'd like to refer to the case where I think it does hold. Namely, Mahāyāna Buddhism.
I agree with G. Priest that classical logic has its limits. It can't give answers to some philosophical questions.
Tetralemma is more encompassing logical system which can deal with questions classical logic can't. To draw the parallel with physics, classical logic bears the similar relationship to tetralemma as Newtonian theory of gravity bears towards the general theory of relativity.
I'd like to continue this discussion in the context of Mahāyāna Buddhism and how it relates to dialetheism.
One of the most important teachings in Mahāyāna is śūnyatā, (engl. emptiness). Emptiness is a metaphysical claim that phenomena lack real and substantial existence. They lack any nature by themselves and derive their identity by how they relate to other things. Their existence is only relative. Emptiness is thus tightly connected to another essential teaching in Buddhism, dependent origination (Sanskrit. Pratītyasamutpāda).
Nāgārjuna was a Buddhist philosopher who defended emptiness against some other philosophical schools in ancient India (Nyāya and Vaisheshika) and some interpretations of dharma (Buddhist thought) which saw some phenomena as having real existence. His claim is that everything is empty including emptiness. This means that everything is dependently originated.
In Sangha (Buddhist community), one can often hear statements that ultimate reality is beyond concepts and can't be talked about. Definition of ultimate reality is given as a reality realised when all concepts are removed through the teaching of emptiness. The previous sentence is a statement that I'll argue is a true contradiction.
One can argue that the previous statement is false by pointing out that saying "something is beyond concepts" is itself a concept. If something is truly beyond concepts, we couldn't talk about it at all, and neither could we give any statements about it. This must include even saying that it's beyond concepts. However, the statement can be also regarded as true in the sense that we can't really say much about ultimate reality except that it's beyond concepts and descriptions. We need to let go of concepts to enter the ultimate:
In the case when the statement is verified as false, we're defining "ability to talk about ultimate reality" as an "ability to give any statements about it".
In the case when the statement is verified as true, we're defining "ability to talk about ultimate reality" as an "ability to give some statements about it (however limited they are)".
Therefore, the truth value of the statement depends on how "ability to talk about ultimate reality" is defined.
From the above arguments, we can conclude that ultimate reality can be talked about, in a limited way.
However, if we get back to the definition of the ultimate reality as "non-conceptual reality that is realised through emptiness", we have a problem. If we can talk about it, even in a limited way, we're still applying concepts to a reality that's non-conceptual by definition. We again come to the contradiction. How do we solve this? Kant, Heidegger and Wittgenstein didn't know.
Wittgenstein claims in the end of Tractatus that his work is meaningless as he gave statements about things he claimed can't be done. I'm not sure whether dialethism is really a solution in the case of Wittgenstein, but if one does agree with him, one is facing a contradiction. He concluded thus that Tractatus is meaningless.
I'll argue that this a bad move.
If Tractatus really were meaningless, than it can't establish anything and hence motivate the view that you can't give statements about some things (form, in his case). It's shooting oneself in the foot as Wittgeinstein's conclusion undermines the very idea he tries to make (that there are things one can't make statements about). In another words, if Tractatus is meaningless than Wittgenstein has no grounds to support his claim that statements can't be given about form.
Hence, if Tractatus were truly meaningless then it cannot motivate the view that it's meaningless.
This example shows how trying to avoid contradiction leads to incoherent conclusions.
Catuṣkoṭi provides a compelling, but counter-intuitive alternative, just accept contradiction. Some statements can be both true and false in the same sense.
Nāgārjuna used Catuṣkoṭi in his work which explains why he had much less problems with contradictions.
We conclude that "Ultimate reality is non-conceptual reality that's realised through emptiness" is a dialetheia, a true contradiction.
Nāgārjuna argued the same and came to the same conclusion.
My question: For people who are familiar with Graham Priest and his work, how do you see his views on Dialetheism?