Moderators: jestingrabbit, Moderators General, Prelates
quintopia wrote:please delete the thread you made so's a mod doesn't have to.
the reason your answer is wrong is simply that this is a logic puzzle, not a real world situation with real people. no one has to look at anyone else when the guru says anything, because they can always see everyone else already (without or without looking) and already have a mental count of the number of blue-eyed people. moreover, there is no reason anyone can think that everyone else will simultaneously come up with the pushing away strategy, since there is no communication and they are not clones, so pushing away communicates nothing.
Dan-o-Myte! wrote:The "Everyone knows everyone knows everyone knows..." does not go 100 levels deep, it can only go three.
phlip wrote:To demonstrate the difference... consider a coin toss. I flip a coin, and look at it... but don't show you. Say it's heads.
Now, I know it's heads, and you don't. You know that I know the coin's value.. but you don't know that I know it's heads, specifically.
Now consider that when I take a look at it, you're able to steal a glance at it, but I don't notice.
Now, you do know that I know it's heads. But I don't know that you know that I know it's heads.
And we can add another level if I catch you stealing a look, but don't say anything, and you think you've gotten away with it... then I know that you know that I know it's heads, but you don't know that I know that you know that I know it's heads.
And we could keep this chain up as long as we like, by making even more contrived situations where I notice that you noticed that I noticed that you're cheating, but I don't think you've noticed that, or whatever.
We can also make an infinitely long chain... say, if I actually explicitly show you the value on the coin. So it's obvious to both of us that it's heads... and the fact that it's obvious is also obvious, and the fact that that is obvious is also obvious, ad infinitum. So I know that you know that I know that you know that it's heads, with any number of "know"s nested around it. The technical term for this state is "common knowledge"... everyone knows it, everyone knows that everyone knows it, to any level of knowledge about knowledge.
Dan-o-Myte! wrote:When it is examined in the form of a chain: What A knows B knows C knows D knows... it appears to go 100 levels deep down to the potential of someone not seeing anyone with blue eyes. But the semantics are where the facts are getting confused. A is not the same as everyone, B is not the same as everyone, C is not the same as everyone.
Dan-o-Myte! wrote:What everyone [A, B, C, D...] know everyone else[[B,C,D...], [A,C,D...], [A,B,D...], [A,B,C...]...respectively] knows everyone knows.
phlip wrote:Sure, at least to start with, that's the other way of proving a universal statement - enumerate every single possibility. But why do you stop after two levels? There's no reason to.
phlip wrote:To demonstrate the difference... consider a coin toss. I flip a coin, and look at it... but don't show you. Say it's heads.
Now, I know it's heads, and you don't. You know that I know the coin's value.. but you don't know that I know it's heads, specifically.
Now consider that when I take a look at it, you're able to steal a glance at it, but I don't notice.
Now, you do know that I know it's heads. But I don't know that you know that I know it's heads.
And we can add another level if I catch you stealing a look, but don't say anything, and you think you've gotten away with it... then I know that you know that I know it's heads, but you don't know that I know that you know that I know it's heads.
And we could keep this chain up as long as we like, by making even more contrived situations where I notice that you noticed that I noticed that you're cheating, but I don't think you've noticed that, or whatever.
We can also make an infinitely long chain... say, if I actually explicitly show you the value on the coin. So it's obvious to both of us that it's heads... and the fact that it's obvious is also obvious, and the fact that that is obvious is also obvious, ad infinitum. So I know that you know that I know that you know that it's heads, with any number of "know"s nested around it. The technical term for this state is "common knowledge"... everyone knows it, everyone knows that everyone knows it, to any level of knowledge about knowledge.
phlip wrote:And since you're saying 97, and you're just an arbitrary blue-eyed person, the same can be said for every blue-eyed person... so the highest number anyone can guarantee is an answer to that question is 97. But that just adds another level of "...everyone can guarantee that..." to the question, which contradicts the fact that the question specifically states "to any arbitrary depth of guarantees", and we'd already claimed that, to any arbitrary depth of guarantees, the answer would be 98 at worst.
So your answer leads to a contradiction.
Can A think B think C think D sees 96? No, because this A's knowledge that C sees 98, and A's knowledge that B knows that C and D can see 98.
itaibn wrote:Two problems with your solution:
1. These guys spent wasted their life getting perfect logical enlightenment. They have no physical strength at all.
2. They actually quite like the island. They only leave because they logically must.
maetharim wrote:Hmmm, I agree that those would be both quite reasonable obstacles for my solutions, but I fail to see the presence of those arguments in the formation of the problem.
skeptical scientist wrote:Okay, if you want to be pedantic and look at exactly what it says in the statement of the problem, let's be pedantic.maetharim wrote:Hmmm, I agree that those would be both quite reasonable obstacles for my solutions, but I fail to see the presence of those arguments in the formation of the problem.
No, but the idea that they want to leave is also quite absent. What it does say is, "Any islanders who have figured out the color of their own eyes then leave the island, and the rest stay." It doesn't matter whether they want to leave, or whether they could leave without knowing their eye color, only that they stay if they don't know their eye color, and leave (that night) if they do. So your "solution", which contradicts this basic fact, is not a solution at all.
Yes this makes sense, I believe I understand. I think I just got my wires get crossed again, I'll attempt to paraphrase :douglasm wrote:Using only common knowledge, everyone can easily deduce that after two days there are at least 3 blue-eyed people on the island. This fact becomes common knowledge at that time. And so on and so forth, until day 100 where the fact that there are at least 100 blue-eyed people on the island becomes common knowledge. At that moment, all blue-eyed people can combine this common knowledge fact with their own personal knowledge and conclude that they have blue eyes. This conclusion is personal knowledge, not common knowledge, but that doesn't matter because personal knowledge of your own eye color is sufficient to leave the island.
halitus87 wrote:- the guru doesn't actually help any one, as there are more than 2 blue eye people every person can see at least 1 blue eyed person.
graatz wrote::evil: I'm sure you all love it when someone new stumbles upon a three year old post and decides to contribute his $0.02, but I find myself unable to resist.
Answering xkcd's questions on the solutions page:
1. What is the quantified piece of information that the Guru provides that each person did not already have?
All of this talk of stratified hypotheses and meta-knowledge is way too convoluted. It's clearly illogical to think that someone honestly thinks that someone thinks, etc. (times 97 or so), that there might only be 0 or 1 people with blue eyes on the island, in light of the fact that everyone knows that everyone else can see no fewer than 98 blue eyes.
All of this talk of stratified hypotheses and meta-knowledge is way too convoluted. It's clearly illogical to think that someone honestly thinks that someone thinks, etc. (times 97 or so), that there might only be 0 or 1 people with blue eyes on the island, in light of the fact that everyone knows that everyone else can see no fewer than 98 blue eyes. Instead, what the Guru is providing is the impetus for everyone to start thinking of his own eyes as blue or not-blue, as opposed to blue, brown, green, hazel, pink, yellow, etc. With this in place, each islander can now consider how the islanders would react based on whether or not his own eyes were blue.
Every islander can conclude that every other islander knows that there are no fewer than 98 blue-eyed islanders.
Yakk wrote:And even though W knows that Z cannot be seeing 0 blue eyed people, the Z being imagined by the Y being imagined by the X being imagined by the W doesn't know this.
Yakk wrote:And even though W knows that Z cannot be seeing 0 blue eyed people, the Z being imagined by the Y being imagined by the X being imagined by the W doesn't know this.
graatz wrote:It only really works for small numbers of actual blue-eyed islanders, because there has to be a case where however many steps A is away from Z, A could still rationally assume that the person under him could actually conceive of Z thinking that.
Random832 wrote:You see, you're only saying this because you aren't a perfect logician.
graatz wrote:On the other hand, I'm claiming that the perfect logician knows the difference between what Y actually knows and what a Y modeled by X modeled by W could be thinking is true. My perfect logician knows that the only way for each person to seriously begin to consider the color of his own eyes, he needs to know that all islanders are considering the case of the same eye color, which is impetus that the Guru provides them.
The Guru tells everyone that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone can see someone with blue eyes. Which they didn't know before.Klotz wrote:Can somebody explain to me what information the Guru gives, if everyone can already see someone with blue eyes?
Macbi wrote:The Guru tells everyone that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone can see someone with blue eyes. Which they didn't know before.
lordatog wrote:The information the Guru gives is due to the fact that the claim is made in public. Everyone can see that everyone is there to hear it, and everyone can see that everyone can see that everyone is there to hear it, and everyone can see that everyone can see that everyone can see that everyone is there to hear it, and so on, infinitely deep.
Suppose for a second that there are only two people on the island with blue eyes. Now, everyone on the island knows that there is at least one person with blue eyes, so you might suppose that the Guru's claim is useless. However, consider blue-eyed person A. He can see one person with blue eyes (blue-eyed person B), and thinks "I know that there is at least one person on the island with blue eyes, but I don't know if B knows that. My eyes may or may not be blue, and if they aren't, then B cannot see anyone with blue eyes." So, even though everyone on the island already knew what the Guru had to say, A did not know that B knew it (and B did not know that A knew it). Because the Guru's claim was made in public, though, A can see that B is there to hear it, and now knows that B knows that there is someone with blue eyes on the island.
With three people, it's more complicated, but works in the same way. A knows that there are blue-eyed people on the island. A knows that B knows that there are blue-eyed people on the island (because they can both see C). A knows that C knows that there are blue-eyed people on the island (because they can both see B). A does NOT know, however, whether B knows that C knows that there are blue-eyed people on the island. He thinks "My eyes may or may not be blue. If they are not, then person B will think 'My eyes may or may not be blue. If they are not, then C cannot see anyone with blue eyes'". Now, A knows that C can see someone with blue eyes, but he doesn't know if B knows that. This distinction is critical. Once the guru has spoken, though, A can see that B can see that C is there to hear it, and now knows that B knows that C knows that there is someone with blue eyes on the island.
For any number of blue eyed people, the chain of knowledge is one step too short for people to leave on their own. If there are 26 blue eyes, then A knows that B knows that C knows that... that X knows that Y can see someone with blue eyes, but you can't extend that to Z. A does not know whether B knows that C knows that... X knows that Y knows that Z can see someone with blue eyes. After the guru has spoken, however, the chain can be extended, because when the claim was made, everyone was there and paying attention, and A saw that B was there to see that C was there to see that... Y was there to see that Z heard the claim.
This is very unintuitive, largely because humans simply don't think like this. We understand "I know that you know that he knows ____" a few levels deep, but if you try to go beyond that your brain just gives up. The islanders, however, are not human - they are perfect logicians, and no human could ever be a perfect logician.
Phrozt wrote:Would kind of suck if someone with blue eyes died...
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests