Arkesus wrote:With the two envelopes problem, it is inferred that nobody knows what you have, .
God knows.
That's because he uses marked envelopes with a cut-out back panel.
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Ted wrote:Lawrence wrote:Ted wrote:Does the barber shave himself? I can't see a contradiction in that. He's doing it himself so he doesn't have to go to the barber. Is that right?
The problem being that if he is doing it himself then the barber isn't doing it, but he IS the barber...
And if the barber is doing it then he isn't doing it himself
It's a set of all sets that are not members of themselves: i.e. if the barber is in the set then he is not in the set, also if he is not in the set then he is in the set.
As I say, set theory is a load of balls.
I prefer mathematical problems that can be visualised with goats behind doors!
OK, I get what the puzzle is trying to do but I would have thought, in terms of logic, that...
...if he is shaving himself then the barber *is* shaving him, because he is the barber.
There were stipulations that if the men don't shave themselves then the barber does it, but that does not mean that they can't shave themselves and have the barber do it too.
Wikipedia wrote:Suppose there is a town with just one male barber. In this town, every man keeps himself clean-shaven by doing one of two things:
Shaving himself, or
going to the barber.
Another way to state this is:
The barber shaves all and only those men in town who do not shave themselves.
All this seems perfectly logical, until we pose the paradoxical question:
Who shaves the barber?
This question results in a paradox because, according to the statement above, he can either be shaven by:
himself, or the barber (which happens to be himself).
However, none of these possibilities are valid! This is because:
If the barber does shave himself, then the barber (himself) must not shave himself.
If the barber does not shave himself, then the barber (himself) must shave himself.
Part-Timer wrote:It's a bit like saying, "All cows are black and white. A brown cow walks into a field. Wow, what a brain-bending paradox!" It's possible because not all cows are black and white.
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