joboom214
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| Joined: 18 Aug 2008 |
| Total Posts: 887 |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:52 PM |
#1: #2 is True.
#2: #1 is False.
bam |
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Herobots
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| Joined: 20 Mar 2010 |
| Total Posts: 545 |
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MadSanity
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| Joined: 13 Nov 2009 |
| Total Posts: 41506 |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:54 PM |
| The two doors. One leads to certain demise, the other safety. One always lies, one always tell the truth. They both claim to know that the other is lying. |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:54 PM |
another paradox for you:
"I am lying."
мυѕιc ιѕ му ѕєcσηɗ Ɩαηgυαgє |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:55 PM |
if 1 is saying 2 is true, and 2 says 1 is false, that means both 1 and 2 are false
FRIENDLY MUSHROOM |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:56 PM |
apieceofabrick120 is right. Because it's a paradox, one of the statements must be false in order for it to make sense. And in making one false, the other must also be false. So both statements are false.
@MadSanity
I'm not sure what you're referencing, but that sounds mighty fine. :3 |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:57 PM |
"The two doors. One leads to certain demise, the other safety. One always lies, one always tell the truth. They both claim to know that the other is lying." what is that from
мυѕιc ιѕ му ѕєcσηɗ Ɩαηgυαgє |
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| 08 Jul 2014 10:58 PM |
@KyleALLT2006
No, that's not the correct reasoning behind it. It's not like math where negatives take precedence over positives. In this case, they both have parity in power. However, because they don't make sense together, the only way for them to make sense is to have them either both say false, or both say true.
And it seems I was wrong about my post. They can't both be false, because that'd make one of the original statements true. This is a paradox. |
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