:This article is about a paradox in the theory of logical conditionals introduced by Lewis Carroll in "[http://fair-use.org/mind/1894/07/notes/a-logical-paradox A Logical Paradox]." For an unrelated paradox of self-reference with a similar name, attributed to Bertrand Russell, see the Barber paradox.

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  • :This article is about a paradox in the theory of logical conditionals introduced by Lewis Carroll in "[http://fair-use.org/mind/1894/07/notes/a-logical-paradox A Logical Paradox]." For an unrelated paradox of self-reference with a similar name, attributed to Bertrand Russell, see the Barber paradox. The Barbershop Paradox was proposed by Lewis Carroll in a three-page essay entitled "[http://fair-use.org/mind/1894/07/notes/a-logical-paradox A Logical Paradox]," which appeared in the July 1894 issue of Mind. The name comes from the "ornamental" short story that Carroll uses to illustrate the paradox (although it had appeared several times in more abstract terms in his writing and correspondence before the story was published). (en)
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  • :This article is about a paradox in the theory of logical conditionals introduced by Lewis Carroll in "[http://fair-use.org/mind/1894/07/notes/a-logical-paradox A Logical Paradox]." For an unrelated paradox of self-reference with a similar name, attributed to Bertrand Russell, see the Barber paradox. (en)
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  • Barbershop paradox (en)
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