Math, asked by thapasuresh102, 8 months ago

If you get this you are a critical thinker. You enter a bedroom. There are 34 people. You kill 30. How many people are in the room?

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Calvin Hobbes

Answered July 19


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Answered by Anonymous
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If you get this you are a critical thinker. You enter a bedroom. There are 34 people. You kill 30. How many people are in the room?

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If you get this you are a critical thinker. You enter a bedroom. There are 34 people. You kill 30. How many people are in the room?

Well, you didn’t specify what or who I was going to kill in the sentence, ‘You kill 30.’. If I assume you were referring to the people in the room, there are still many uncertainties. It is unclear what category of ‘person’ is included in the final count (living or dead), so if we’re counting dead people then there are still 34 left in the room. That is, of course, assuming they weren’t moved either during the process of them being killed or after they were killed. Perhaps I entered the bedroom, took those I was going to kill out of the bedroom and killed them outside. In this scenario, there are 4 people left in the room - of course, that also assumes both that I only moved those I was going to kill and that there were only 34 people and no more in the room. You said that there were 34 people in the bedroom, which could simply be part of a greater number of people. Also, it is unclear when the recording of the number of people in the room is taking place. The number could differ depending on this variable, since you didn’t specify at what point in the scenario I measure the number of people in the room. So, in conclusion, no matter whether or not you include dead people in the count and no matter whether or not I assume that I am killing the referred-to people, you cannot be sure how many ‘people’ are in the room. Some could have been moved at some point, those 34 people could be a smaller portion of more people in the room and the 30 that I killed could be part of a larger number of people I killed. However, if the time when I am measuring the number of people in the room is the same as the time when there were 34 people in the room, then there are definitely 34 people in the room (which can still be part of a larger number). However, your parameters for deciding whether someone is inside or outside the room must be the same as those used that originally determined that there were 34 people in the room at that time.

P.S. Sorry if this makes no sense, my ramblings often don’t to other people. Anyway, this was a fun little brain exercise even if it only evoked nonsense out of me.

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