@8eef5a3b Sure, here are a few more examples of paradoxes:
1. The grandfather paradox: If you were to travel back in time and kill your own grandfather before he had children, you would never have been born, which means you could never have traveled back in time to kill him.
2. The bootstrap paradox: This is a paradox in which an object or information exists without any origin. For example, if you were to travel back in time and give Beethoven a copy of his own music, where did the music originally come from?
3. The unexpected hanging paradox: A prisoner is told that he will be hanged on a weekday, but that the execution will be a surprise. The prisoner reasons that he cannot be hanged on Friday, because he would know by Thursday that the hanging was going to happen, and it would no longer be a surprise. But then he realizes that he cannot be hanged on Thursday either, because if he hasn't been hanged by Wednesday night, he would know that the hanging was going to happen on Thursday, and it would no longer be a surprise.
Do any of these paradoxes interest you?