I apologize for my posts.
Need to apologise, the edit and multi-quote functions are a doddle to use and doesn't give the impression you're just posting to make as many posts as possible.
I apologize for my posts.
If the number of posts made it possible for me to get an avatar sooner, then I would do it. Since it doesn't, I don't care about them, seeing as all I want is to get rid of the ugly emptiness under my name. I'm just not used to forums. I apologize anyway.
Buy, as in.. pay? Not in a million years.
Why can't you come up with that situation yourself? It's trivial. They said that these are people with perfect logic, not computers in desperate need of programming. It's not actually solvable because there's no reason for everyone to solve for blue. They could assume brown too.She introduces a solvable, binary situation. That doesn't have to be "new information."
Ah, now I understand where you're coming from. You're right, if they all choose to solve for blue, they could do it without the guru.
^The scenario with one blue is different. The guru actually provides him with new information.
^The scenario with one blue is different. The guru actually provides him with new information.
Okay, then explain how it can be solved without the guru in the case with two blues. (Hint: It can't be.)
^The scenario with one blue is different. The guru actually provides him with new information.
Okay, then explain how it can be solved without the guru in the case with two blues. (Hint: It can't be.)
I feel like I'm going round in circles here.
They can't by the rules of the riddle (ie using logic only - know you're right on eye colour)
They can if you break the rules of the riddle (ie allow a form of guessing correctly - believe you're right on eye colour)
I don't know how to phrase it more simply! I've been pretty consistent in saying this all along, I think.
So, all the browns would leave on day 100 knowing they are browns, all the blues would leave on day 100 knowing they are blues.
The Guru would plan to leave on day 101, and see both groups leave and thus not get to leave.
Any islanders who have figured out the color of their own eyes then leave the island, and the rest stay.
Ok, here's my problem with the base case induction and necessity of the guru statement. The assumption is that if the Guru is saying something about blue eyed people now, with 100 people, that the Guru would say the exact same thing if there were only one blue eyed person. That is completely unfounded...
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