Moderator: Only_Humean
Flannel Jesus wrote:I present to you two baskets, with lids closed. Both of the baskets have notes attached to them.
On basket 1 is written,
"Either this basket contains nothing, or the basket with the false note contains nothing, but not both."
On basket 2 is written,
"Either this basket contains $1million and the basket with the false note contains nothing, or this box contains nothing and the box with the true note contains $1million."
One note is true, and one note is false. One basket contains $1million, and one contains nothing. I will give a picture of $1million to the the first one to both answer correctly and tell me how they proved it. Let the race begin!
I must also assure you that there's no word game going on here, and the answer is deducable.
Flannel Jesus wrote:I present to you two baskets, with lids closed. Both of the baskets have notes attached to them.
On basket 1 is written,
"Either this basket contains nothing, or the basket with the false note contains nothing, but not both."
On basket 2 is written,
"Either this basket contains $1million and the basket with the false note contains nothing, or this box contains nothing and the box with the true note contains $1million."
One note is true, and one note is false. One basket contains $1million, and one contains nothing. I will give a picture of $1million to the the first one to both answer correctly and tell me how they proved it. Let the race begin!
I must also assure you that there's no word game going on here, and the answer is deducable.
Flannel Jesus wrote:wrong
if note1 is false and basket1 doesn't have anything, then note1 is true, because note1 says ..."or the basket with the false note contains nothing."
Flannel Jesus wrote:On basket 1 is written,
"Either this basket contains nothing, or the basket with the false note contains nothing, but not both."

fuse wrote:Fuck, I got it wrong.
Basket 1 contains nothing, but has the true note.
Basket 2 contains $1 million, but has the false note.
If basket 1 contains nothing, then the first part of it's disjunction is true, but the second might not be (the false note basket might contain $1 million). And since both aren't true the whole statement would be true.
If basket 1 has the true note, then basket 2 has the false note, so it can't be true that the false note contains nothing and the true note contains $1 million. Thus note 2 is false, but the basket contains $1 million.
Sauwelios wrote:fuse wrote:Fuck, I got it wrong.
Basket 1 contains nothing, but has the true note.
Basket 2 contains $1 million, but has the false note.
If basket 1 contains nothing, then the first part of it's disjunction is true, but the second might not be (the false note basket might contain $1 million). And since both aren't true the whole statement would be true.
If basket 1 has the true note, then basket 2 has the false note, so it can't be true that the false note contains nothing and the true note contains $1 million. Thus note 2 is false, but the basket contains $1 million.
Way to go, fuse. Still, I think your former solution (and mine) is also correct: it is possible for basket 1 to contain nothing and have the false note attached to it, because then both "this basket contains nothing" and "the basket with the false note contains nothing" are true, which means the "but not both" is false and thereby the note as a whole is false.

captaincrunk wrote:This would be better expressed in propositional calculus.
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