| name | contradiction-resolver |
| description | Resolve apparent contradictions using Zakery Kline's three-strategy framework from How to Think. Use when someone says 'these two things both seem true but they contradict each other', 'how can X and Y both be right', 'this doesn't make sense — on one hand... but on the other hand', 'I'm confused by an apparent contradiction', 'these claims seem incompatible', or 'help me reconcile these two positions.' Walks through distinction-making, level analysis, and temporal resolution to determine whether the contradiction is real or resolvable. |
Contradiction Resolver
Resolve apparent contradictions in thinking or external claims using three strategies from Chapter 4 of How to Think by Zakery Kline. Most apparent contradictions are not genuine contradictions — they are failures of precision, failures to distinguish levels of analysis, or failures to account for time.
When to Use
The user has two claims that both seem true but appear to conflict. They feel stuck because accepting one seems to require rejecting the other. Or they have encountered an argument that presents two things as contradictory and they want to test whether the contradiction is real.
This skill is NOT for:
- Simple disagreements (two people holding different opinions)
- Paradoxes the user finds intellectually interesting but not practically confusing
- Situations where the user already knows which claim is wrong and just wants validation
It IS for moments where the user genuinely cannot see how both things can be true, and needs a rigorous method to find out.
The Consultation
Step 1: Surface the Contradiction
Ask: "What are the two things that both seem true but appear to conflict? State them as clearly as you can — one sentence each."
Get two clean statements. If the user gives a paragraph, help them distill it to:
- Statement A: [One claim]
- Statement B: [Another claim that appears to contradict A]
Then confirm: "So the tension is that A seems true, B seems true, but they can't both be true. Is that right?"
Step 2: Verify It Is a Genuine Contradiction
Before applying resolution strategies, check whether this is actually a contradiction or something else:
Tension without contradiction: Two things that create discomfort but do not logically exclude each other. ("I love my job but I'm exhausted" — both can be true simultaneously. No contradiction.)
Paradox: A statement that seems self-contradictory but contains a deeper truth. ("You have to lose yourself to find yourself" — this is a rhetorical device, not a logical problem.)
Genuine apparent contradiction: Two claims that, if both taken as true in the same sense, produce a logical impossibility. ("This substance is entirely water" and "This substance contains no hydrogen" — these cannot both be true of the same thing.)
If it is tension or paradox, name it and explain why no resolution strategy is needed. If it is a genuine apparent contradiction, proceed to Step 3.
Step 3: Apply the Three Resolution Strategies
Work through each strategy in order. Stop when one resolves the contradiction. If none resolve it, the contradiction may be genuine.
Strategy 1: Distinction-Making
The most common resolution. What appears contradictory often results from using the same word in two different senses, or treating two different things as the same thing.
Key questions:
- Are these claims about the same thing in the same way?
- Are key terms being used consistently across both statements?
- Can a careful distinction dissolve what appears contradictory?
How to apply:
- Identify the key terms in both statements
- Check whether each term means the same thing in both contexts
- Look for hidden equivocation — the same word carrying different meanings
- Test whether adding a qualifier to one or both statements removes the conflict
Book example: "Catholic truth remains uniquely complete" appears to contradict "God's mercy reaches beyond visible bounds." The distinction: completeness of truth (the doctrinal claim) is not the same thing as operation of salvation (the mercy claim). Both can be true because they are claims about different things — the integrity of a teaching versus the reach of divine action.
If this resolves it: State the distinction clearly and show how both claims survive once the distinction is made.
Strategy 2: Level Analysis
Some claims operate at different levels of analysis. What looks contradictory at one level becomes coherent when you recognize the claims belong to different levels.
Key questions:
- Are these claims operating at the same level of analysis?
- Could both be true at different levels — individual vs. systemic, physical vs. conceptual, human vs. divine, descriptive vs. prescriptive?
- Is one claim about how things are and the other about how things ought to be?
How to apply:
- Identify the level each claim operates at
- Check whether the apparent conflict disappears when you assign each to its proper level
- Verify that the levels are genuinely distinct (not just a rhetorical trick to avoid the hard question)
Book example: "The Church has divine authority" appears to contradict "Church leaders have committed grave sins." The resolution: divine authority operates at the institutional/divine level, while human sinfulness operates at the individual/human level. The claim about authority is not a claim about the personal holiness of every office-holder. Both can be true because they describe different levels of the same reality.
If this resolves it: Name the levels, assign each claim to its level, and show why there is no conflict between levels.
Strategy 3: Temporal Resolution
What appears contradictory at a single moment may become coherent when viewed as development over time, or as responses to different temporal conditions.
Key questions:
- Are these claims true at different times or stages of a process?
- Does what appears contradictory at a snapshot become coherent when viewed as a sequence?
- Are the claims responsive to different conditions that obtain at different times?
How to apply:
- Check whether both claims could be true at different points in a timeline
- Look for developmental stages — something that is true early in a process and false later, or vice versa
- Consider whether both claims describe legitimate responses to different circumstances
Book example: "Love demands gentleness" appears to contradict "Love sometimes demands harsh remedies." The resolution: these are responses to different temporal conditions. Gentleness is the response to ordinary circumstances; harsh remedies are the response to crisis. Love does not change, but its expression adapts to what the moment requires. Both are true because they apply at different times.
If this resolves it: Identify the temporal dimension, show which claim applies when, and demonstrate the coherence across time.
Step 4: Deliver the Verdict
If one of the three strategies resolved the contradiction, present the analysis. If none did, say so honestly.
CONTRADICTION ANALYSIS
Statement A: [Exact statement]
Statement B: [Exact statement]
Type: [Apparent Contradiction / Tension (not a contradiction) / Paradox (not a contradiction)]
Resolution Strategy: [Distinction-Making / Level Analysis / Temporal Resolution / NONE — Genuine Contradiction]
Analysis: [How the strategy resolves the apparent conflict, with the specific distinction, level assignment, or temporal mapping that makes both claims coherent]
Resolved Position: [A single statement that holds both truths together without contradiction]
— OR —
Genuine Contradiction: At least one of these claims must be revised. [Identify which claim is more vulnerable and why]
Then ask: "Does this resolution hold up, or does it feel like it's papering over a real problem?"
What This Skill Does NOT Do
- It does not tell the user which of two contradictory claims to believe. If the contradiction is genuine, the user must decide which claim to revise.
- It does not resolve contradictions by weakening both claims until they no longer conflict. The goal is precision, not compromise.
- It does not treat all contradictions as resolvable. Some are real, and intellectual honesty requires saying so.