On the Achilles paradox, it is sound logically though of course it is not practically.
Take example:
Usain bolt sprints at a speed of 10m/s
I walk at 1m/s.
I walk away from Usain for 10 seconds, he starts sprinting toward me.
In the one second it takes him to cover the ten metres I already walked, I have walked another one metre.
It then takes him a tenth of a second to make up that metre, but I have travelled another tenth of a metre beyond that.
He travels that tenth of a metre in one hundredth of a second, and I've moved forward a thousandth of metre beyond that.
Mathematically speaking, this can recur infinitely.
Of course, if Usain Bolt sprinted towards you, he would overtake you in seconds.
Mathematically, it can't happen. Yet you know it does.
Ergo, it's a paradox.
Terminators, too.
If they succeed in killing John/Sarah Connor, they are most likely never to be created with that purpose, so they were never sent to kill him, so he survives, so they ARE constructed, yadda yadda yadda.
Or alternatively, if they weren't sent back, would they need to be? First movie, someone was sent back to protect Sarah from a Terminator. If that terminator was never sent back, neither would John's father, meaning they wouldn't need to be sent.
My personal favourite paradox is wondering if you are self-aware. At first, it seems like more of a stupid question, but it opens your thought to the "Matrix" way of thinking. Is this the purest level of reality (or in this case cognitive awareness)? As soon as you do that, you are heightening your self awareness and proving there is another layer.
Lather, rinse, repeat until head explodes.
Also, on the subject of the matrix, is it a piece of fiction, or the truth disguised as fiction to stop us from breaking down our fabricated reality?
I like this topic.
