fbpx
Wikipedia

Catch-22 (logic)

A catch-22 is a paradoxical situation from which an individual cannot escape because of contradictory rules or limitations.[1] The term was coined by Joseph Heller, who used it in his 1961 novel Catch-22.

A flowchart showing Joseph Heller's original Catch-22

Catch-22s often result from rules, regulations, or procedures that an individual is subject to, but has no control over, because to fight the rule is to accept it. Another example is a situation in which someone is in need of something that can only be had by not being in need of it (e.g. the only way to qualify for a loan is to prove to the bank that you do not need a loan). One connotation of the term is that the creators of the "catch-22" situation have created arbitrary rules in order to justify and conceal their own abuse of power.

Origin and meaning

Joseph Heller coined the term in his 1961 novel Catch-22, which describes absurd bureaucratic constraints on soldiers in World War II. The term is introduced by the character Doc Daneeka, an army psychiatrist who invokes "Catch-22" to explain why any pilot requesting mental evaluation for insanity—hoping to be found not sane enough to fly and thereby escape dangerous missions—demonstrates his own sanity in creating the request and thus cannot be declared insane. This phrase also means a dilemma or difficult circumstance from which there is no escape because of mutually conflicting or dependent conditions.[2]

"You mean there's a catch?"

"Sure there's a catch," Doc Daneeka replied. "Catch-22. Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn't really crazy."

There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one's own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn't, but if he was sane, he had to fly them. If he flew them, he was crazy and didn't have to; but if he didn't want to, he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.

Different formulations of "Catch-22" appear throughout the novel. The term is applied to various loopholes and quirks of the military system, always with the implication that rules are inaccessible to and slanted against those lower in the hierarchy. In chapter 6, Yossarian (the protagonist) is told that Catch-22 requires him to do anything his commanding officer tells him to do, regardless of whether these orders contradict orders from the officer's superiors.[3]

In a final episode, Catch-22 is described to Yossarian by an old woman recounting an act of violence by soldiers:[4][5]

"Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can't stop them from doing."

"What the hell are you talking about?" Yossarian shouted at her in bewildered, furious protest. "How did you know it was Catch-22? Who the hell told you it was Catch-22?"

"The soldiers with the hard white hats and clubs. The girls were crying. 'Did we do anything wrong?' they said. The men said no and pushed them away out the door with the ends of their clubs. 'Then why are you chasing us out?' the girls said. 'Catch-22,' the men said. All they kept saying was 'Catch-22, Catch-22.' What does it mean, Catch-22? What is Catch-22?"

"Didn't they show it to you?" Yossarian demanded, stamping about in anger and distress. "Didn't you even make them read it?"

"They don't have to show us Catch-22," the old woman answered. "The law says they don't have to."

"What law says they don't have to?"

"Catch-22."

According to literature professor Ian Gregson, the old woman's narrative defines "Catch-22" more directly as the "brutal operation of power", stripping away the "bogus sophistication" of the earlier scenarios.[6]

Other appearances in the novel

Besides referring to an unsolvable logical dilemma, Catch-22 is invoked to explain or justify the military bureaucracy. For example, in the first chapter, it requires Yossarian to sign his name to letters that he censors while he is confined to a hospital bed. One clause mentioned in chapter 10 closes a loophole in promotions, which one private had been exploiting to reattain the attractive rank of private first class after any promotion. Through courts-martial for going AWOL, he would be busted in rank back to private, but Catch-22 limited the number of times he could do this before being sent to the stockade.

At another point in the book, a prostitute explains to Yossarian that she cannot marry him because he is crazy, and she will never marry a crazy man. She considers any man crazy who would marry a woman who is not a virgin. This closed logic loop clearly illustrated Catch-22 because by her logic, all men who refuse to marry her are sane and thus she would consider marriage; but as soon as a man agrees to marry her, he becomes crazy for wanting to marry a non-virgin, and is instantly rejected.

At one point, Captain Black attempts to press Milo into depriving Major Major of food as a consequence of not signing a loyalty oath that Major Major was never given an opportunity to sign in the first place. Captain Black asks Milo, "You're not against Catch-22, are you?"

In chapter 40, Catch-22 forces Colonels Korn and Cathcart to promote Yossarian to Major and ground him rather than simply sending him home. They fear that if they do not, others will refuse to fly, just as Yossarian did.

Significance of the number 22

Heller originally wanted to call the phrase (and hence, the book) by other numbers, but he and his publishers eventually settled on 22. The number has no particular significance; it was chosen more or less for euphony. The title was originally Catch-18, but Heller changed it after the popular Mila 18 was published a short time beforehand.[7][8]

Usage

The term "catch-22" has filtered into common usage in the English language. In a 1975 interview, Heller said the term would not translate well into other languages.[8]

James E. Combs and Dan D. Nimmo suggest that the idea of a "catch-22" has gained popular currency because so many people in modern society are exposed to frustrating bureaucratic logic. They write:

Everyone, then, who deals with organizations understands the bureaucratic logic of Catch-22. In high school or college, for example, students can participate in student government, a form of self-government and democracy that allows them to decide whatever they want, just so long as the principal or dean of students approves. This bogus democracy that can be overruled by arbitrary fiat is perhaps a citizen's first encounter with organizations that may profess 'open' and libertarian values, but in fact are closed and hierarchical systems. Catch-22 is an organizational assumption, an unwritten law of informal power that exempts the organization from responsibility and accountability, and puts the individual in the absurd position of being excepted for the convenience or unknown purposes of the organization.[5]

Along with George Orwell's "doublethink", "catch-22" has become one of the best-recognized ways to describe the predicament of being trapped by contradictory rules.[9]

A significant type of definition of alternative medicine has been termed a catch-22. In a 1998 editorial co-authored by Marcia Angell, a former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, argued that:

It is time for the scientific community to stop giving alternative medicine a free ride. There cannot be two kinds of medicine—conventional and alternative. There is only medicine that has been adequately tested and medicine that has not, medicine that works and medicine that may or may not work. Once a treatment has been tested rigorously, it no longer matters whether it was considered alternative at the outset. If it is found to be reasonably safe and effective, it will be accepted. But assertions, speculation, and testimonials do not substitute for evidence. Alternative treatments should be subjected to scientific testing no less rigorous than that required for conventional treatments.[10]

This definition has been described by Robert L. Park as a logical catch-22 which ensures that any complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) method which is proven to work "would no longer be CAM, it would simply be medicine."[11]

Logic

The archetypal catch-22, as formulated by Joseph Heller, involves the case of John Yossarian, a U.S. Army Air Forces bombardier, who wishes to be grounded from combat flight. This will only happen if he is evaluated by the squadron's flight surgeon and found "unfit to fly". "Unfit" would be any pilot who is willing to fly such dangerous missions, as one would have to be mad to volunteer for possible death. However, to be evaluated, he must request the evaluation, an act that is considered sufficient proof for being declared sane. These conditions make it impossible to be declared "unfit".

The "Catch-22" is that "anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn't really crazy".[12] Hence, pilots who request a mental fitness evaluation are sane, and therefore must fly in combat. At the same time, if an evaluation is not requested by the pilot, he will never receive one and thus can never be found insane, meaning he must also fly in combat.

Therefore, Catch-22 ensures that no pilot can ever be grounded for being insane even if he is.

A logical formulation of this situation is:

1.   For a person to be excused from flying on the grounds of insanity (E), he must both be insane (I) and have requested an evaluation (R). (premise)
2.   An insane person (I) does not request an evaluation (¬R) because he does not realize he is insane. (premise)
3.   Either a person is not insane (¬I) or does not request an evaluation (¬R). (2. and material implication)
4.   No person can be both insane (I) and request an evaluation (R). (3. and De Morgan's laws)
5.   Therefore, no person can be excused from flying on the grounds of insanity (¬E) because no person can be both insane and have requested an evaluation. (4., 1. and modus tollens)

The philosopher Laurence Goldstein argues that the "airman's dilemma" is logically not even a condition that is true under no circumstances; it is a "vacuous biconditional" that is ultimately meaningless. Goldstein writes:[13]

The catch is this: what looks like a statement of the conditions under which an airman can be excused flying dangerous missions reduces not to the statement

(i) 'An airman can be excused flying dangerous missions if and only if Cont' (where 'Cont' is a contradiction)

(which could be a mean way of disguising an unpleasant truth), but to the worthlessly empty announcement

(ii) 'An airman can be excused flying dangerous missions if and only if it is not the case that an airman can be excused flying dangerous missions'

If the catch were (i), that would not be so bad—an airman would at least be able to discover that under no circumstances could he avoid combat duty. But Catch-22 is worse—a welter of words that amounts to nothing; it is without content, it conveys no information at all.

See also

References

  1. ^ Largest Idioms Dictionary, The Idioms. "Catch 22 meaning". Theidioms.com. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  2. ^ Beidler, Philip D. (1995). Scriptures for a Generation: What We Were Reading in the '60s. p. 162. ISBN 978-0820317878. It is Catch-22: Dr. Daneeka explains how anybody who is crazy has a right to ask to be removed from combat status but how anybody who asks is revealing a rational concern for his own safety that makes him not crazy;
  3. ^ Margot A. Henriksen, Dr. Strangelove's America: Society and Culture in the Atomic Age; University of California Press, 1997; ISBN 0-520-08310-5; p. 250.
  4. ^ "Joseph Heller", Gale Encyclopedia of Biography, accessed via Answers.com, 16 August 2013.
  5. ^ a b James E. Combs & Dan D. Nimmo, The Comedy of Democracy; Westport, CT: Praeger (Greenwood Publishing Group), 1996; ISBN 0-275-94979-6; p. 152.
  6. ^ Ian Gregson, Character and Satire in Post War Fiction; London: Continuum, 2006; ISBN 978-1441130006; p. 38.
  7. ^ Aldridge, John W. (1986-10-26). "The Loony Horror of it All – 'Catch-22' Turns 25". The New York Times. p. Section 7, Page 3, Column 1. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  8. ^ a b "A classic by any other name", The Telegraph, 18 November 2007.
  9. ^ Richard King, "22 Going on 50: Half a century later, the world is full of Catch-22s"; The Smart Set, 20 July 2011.
  10. ^ Angell, M.; et al. (1998). "Alternative medicine – The risks of untested and unregulated remedies". New England Journal of Medicine. 339 (12): 839–841. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.694.9581. doi:10.1056/NEJM199809173391210. PMID 9738094.
  11. ^ Park, Robert L., Alternative Medicine: The Clinton Commission's Catch-22. 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Heller, Joseph (1999). Catch-22: A Novel. Simon and Schuster. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-684-86513-3. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  13. ^ Goldstein, Laurence (2004). "The Barber, Russell's paradox, catch-22, God, contradiction and more: A defence of a Wittgensteinian conception of contradiction". In Priest, Graham; Beall, J. C.; Armour-Garb, Bradley (eds.). The law of non-contradiction: new philosophical essays. Oxford University Press. Retrieved June 25, 2023.

catch, logic, catch, paradoxical, situation, from, which, individual, cannot, escape, because, contradictory, rules, limitations, term, coined, joseph, heller, used, 1961, novel, catch, flowchart, showing, joseph, heller, original, catch, 22catch, often, resul. A catch 22 is a paradoxical situation from which an individual cannot escape because of contradictory rules or limitations 1 The term was coined by Joseph Heller who used it in his 1961 novel Catch 22 A flowchart showing Joseph Heller s original Catch 22Catch 22s often result from rules regulations or procedures that an individual is subject to but has no control over because to fight the rule is to accept it Another example is a situation in which someone is in need of something that can only be had by not being in need of it e g the only way to qualify for a loan is to prove to the bank that you do not need a loan One connotation of the term is that the creators of the catch 22 situation have created arbitrary rules in order to justify and conceal their own abuse of power Contents 1 Origin and meaning 1 1 Other appearances in the novel 1 2 Significance of the number 22 2 Usage 3 Logic 4 See also 5 ReferencesOrigin and meaning EditJoseph Heller coined the term in his 1961 novel Catch 22 which describes absurd bureaucratic constraints on soldiers in World War II The term is introduced by the character Doc Daneeka an army psychiatrist who invokes Catch 22 to explain why any pilot requesting mental evaluation for insanity hoping to be found not sane enough to fly and thereby escape dangerous missions demonstrates his own sanity in creating the request and thus cannot be declared insane This phrase also means a dilemma or difficult circumstance from which there is no escape because of mutually conflicting or dependent conditions 2 You mean there s a catch Sure there s a catch Doc Daneeka replied Catch 22 Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn t really crazy There was only one catch and that was Catch 22 which specified that a concern for one s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind Orr was crazy and could be grounded All he had to do was ask and as soon as he did he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn t but if he was sane he had to fly them If he flew them he was crazy and didn t have to but if he didn t want to he was sane and had to Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch 22 and let out a respectful whistle Different formulations of Catch 22 appear throughout the novel The term is applied to various loopholes and quirks of the military system always with the implication that rules are inaccessible to and slanted against those lower in the hierarchy In chapter 6 Yossarian the protagonist is told that Catch 22 requires him to do anything his commanding officer tells him to do regardless of whether these orders contradict orders from the officer s superiors 3 In a final episode Catch 22 is described to Yossarian by an old woman recounting an act of violence by soldiers 4 5 Catch 22 says they have a right to do anything we can t stop them from doing What the hell are you talking about Yossarian shouted at her in bewildered furious protest How did you know it was Catch 22 Who the hell told you it was Catch 22 The soldiers with the hard white hats and clubs The girls were crying Did we do anything wrong they said The men said no and pushed them away out the door with the ends of their clubs Then why are you chasing us out the girls said Catch 22 the men said All they kept saying was Catch 22 Catch 22 What does it mean Catch 22 What is Catch 22 Didn t they show it to you Yossarian demanded stamping about in anger and distress Didn t you even make them read it They don t have to show us Catch 22 the old woman answered The law says they don t have to What law says they don t have to Catch 22 According to literature professor Ian Gregson the old woman s narrative defines Catch 22 more directly as the brutal operation of power stripping away the bogus sophistication of the earlier scenarios 6 Other appearances in the novel Edit Besides referring to an unsolvable logical dilemma Catch 22 is invoked to explain or justify the military bureaucracy For example in the first chapter it requires Yossarian to sign his name to letters that he censors while he is confined to a hospital bed One clause mentioned in chapter 10 closes a loophole in promotions which one private had been exploiting to reattain the attractive rank of private first class after any promotion Through courts martial for going AWOL he would be busted in rank back to private but Catch 22 limited the number of times he could do this before being sent to the stockade At another point in the book a prostitute explains to Yossarian that she cannot marry him because he is crazy and she will never marry a crazy man She considers any man crazy who would marry a woman who is not a virgin This closed logic loop clearly illustrated Catch 22 because by her logic all men who refuse to marry her are sane and thus she would consider marriage but as soon as a man agrees to marry her he becomes crazy for wanting to marry a non virgin and is instantly rejected At one point Captain Black attempts to press Milo into depriving Major Major of food as a consequence of not signing a loyalty oath that Major Major was never given an opportunity to sign in the first place Captain Black asks Milo You re not against Catch 22 are you In chapter 40 Catch 22 forces Colonels Korn and Cathcart to promote Yossarian to Major and ground him rather than simply sending him home They fear that if they do not others will refuse to fly just as Yossarian did Significance of the number 22 Edit Main articles Catch 22 Title and Catch 22 Heller originally wanted to call the phrase and hence the book by other numbers but he and his publishers eventually settled on 22 The number has no particular significance it was chosen more or less for euphony The title was originally Catch 18 but Heller changed it after the popular Mila 18 was published a short time beforehand 7 8 Usage EditThe term catch 22 has filtered into common usage in the English language In a 1975 interview Heller said the term would not translate well into other languages 8 James E Combs and Dan D Nimmo suggest that the idea of a catch 22 has gained popular currency because so many people in modern society are exposed to frustrating bureaucratic logic They write Everyone then who deals with organizations understands the bureaucratic logic of Catch 22 In high school or college for example students can participate in student government a form of self government and democracy that allows them to decide whatever they want just so long as the principal or dean of students approves This bogus democracy that can be overruled by arbitrary fiat is perhaps a citizen s first encounter with organizations that may profess open and libertarian values but in fact are closed and hierarchical systems Catch 22 is an organizational assumption an unwritten law of informal power that exempts the organization from responsibility and accountability and puts the individual in the absurd position of being excepted for the convenience or unknown purposes of the organization 5 Along with George Orwell s doublethink catch 22 has become one of the best recognized ways to describe the predicament of being trapped by contradictory rules 9 A significant type of definition of alternative medicine has been termed a catch 22 In a 1998 editorial co authored by Marcia Angell a former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine argued that It is time for the scientific community to stop giving alternative medicine a free ride There cannot be two kinds of medicine conventional and alternative There is only medicine that has been adequately tested and medicine that has not medicine that works and medicine that may or may not work Once a treatment has been tested rigorously it no longer matters whether it was considered alternative at the outset If it is found to be reasonably safe and effective it will be accepted But assertions speculation and testimonials do not substitute for evidence Alternative treatments should be subjected to scientific testing no less rigorous than that required for conventional treatments 10 This definition has been described by Robert L Park as a logical catch 22 which ensures that any complementary and alternative medicine CAM method which is proven to work would no longer be CAM it would simply be medicine 11 Logic EditThe archetypal catch 22 as formulated by Joseph Heller involves the case of John Yossarian a U S Army Air Forces bombardier who wishes to be grounded from combat flight This will only happen if he is evaluated by the squadron s flight surgeon and found unfit to fly Unfit would be any pilot who is willing to fly such dangerous missions as one would have to be mad to volunteer for possible death However to be evaluated he must request the evaluation an act that is considered sufficient proof for being declared sane These conditions make it impossible to be declared unfit The Catch 22 is that anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn t really crazy 12 Hence pilots who request a mental fitness evaluation are sane and therefore must fly in combat At the same time if an evaluation is not requested by the pilot he will never receive one and thus can never be found insane meaning he must also fly in combat Therefore Catch 22 ensures that no pilot can ever be grounded for being insane even if he is A logical formulation of this situation is 1 E I R displaystyle E rightarrow I land R For a person to be excused from flying on the grounds of insanity E he must both be insane I and have requested an evaluation R premise 2 I R displaystyle I rightarrow neg R An insane person I does not request an evaluation R because he does not realize he is insane premise 3 I R displaystyle neg I lor neg R Either a person is not insane I or does not request an evaluation R 2 and material implication 4 I R displaystyle neg I land R No person can be both insane I and request an evaluation R 3 and De Morgan s laws 5 E displaystyle neg E Therefore no person can be excused from flying on the grounds of insanity E because no person can be both insane and have requested an evaluation 4 1 and modus tollens The philosopher Laurence Goldstein argues that the airman s dilemma is logically not even a condition that is true under no circumstances it is a vacuous biconditional that is ultimately meaningless Goldstein writes 13 The catch is this what looks like a statement of the conditions under which an airman can be excused flying dangerous missions reduces not to the statement i An airman can be excused flying dangerous missions if and only if Cont where Cont is a contradiction which could be a mean way of disguising an unpleasant truth but to the worthlessly empty announcement ii An airman can be excused flying dangerous missions if and only if it is not the case that an airman can be excused flying dangerous missions If the catch were i that would not be so bad an airman would at least be able to discover that under no circumstances could he avoid combat duty But Catch 22 is worse a welter of words that amounts to nothing it is without content it conveys no information at all See also Edit Philosophy portal Novels portalBegging the question Circular reasoning Cornelian dilemma Deadlock Double bind False dilemma Feedback loop Hobson s choice taking what is offered or taking nothing Ironic process theory Kobayashi Maru a choice presented in Star Trek The Lady or the Tiger a no win situation List of paradoxes Morton s fork Mu Ninety ninety rule No win situation Pyrrhic victory Self reference Social trap Strange loop Vicious circle Wicked problem ZugzwangReferences Edit Largest Idioms Dictionary The Idioms Catch 22 meaning Theidioms com Retrieved 12 May 2020 Beidler Philip D 1995 Scriptures for a Generation What We Were Reading in the 60s p 162 ISBN 978 0820317878 It is Catch 22 Dr Daneeka explains how anybody who is crazy has a right to ask to be removed from combat status but how anybody who asks is revealing a rational concern for his own safety that makes him not crazy Margot A Henriksen Dr Strangelove s America Society and Culture in the Atomic Age University of California Press 1997 ISBN 0 520 08310 5 p 250 Joseph Heller Gale Encyclopedia of Biography accessed via Answers com 16 August 2013 a b James E Combs amp Dan D Nimmo The Comedy of Democracy Westport CT Praeger Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 ISBN 0 275 94979 6 p 152 Ian Gregson Character and Satire in Post War Fiction London Continuum 2006 ISBN 978 1441130006 p 38 Aldridge John W 1986 10 26 The Loony Horror of it All Catch 22 Turns 25 The New York Times p Section 7 Page 3 Column 1 Retrieved 2011 01 09 a b A classic by any other name The Telegraph 18 November 2007 Richard King 22 Going on 50 Half a century later the world is full of Catch 22s The Smart Set 20 July 2011 Angell M et al 1998 Alternative medicine The risks of untested and unregulated remedies New England Journal of Medicine 339 12 839 841 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 694 9581 doi 10 1056 NEJM199809173391210 PMID 9738094 Park Robert L Alternative Medicine The Clinton Commission s Catch 22 Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Heller Joseph 1999 Catch 22 A Novel Simon and Schuster p 52 ISBN 978 0 684 86513 3 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Goldstein Laurence 2004 The Barber Russell s paradox catch 22 God contradiction and more A defence of a Wittgensteinian conception of contradiction In Priest Graham Beall J C Armour Garb Bradley eds The law of non contradiction new philosophical essays Oxford University Press Retrieved June 25 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catch 22 logic amp oldid 1163362503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.