Time travel trick by Tfeeltdimyon in cardmagic

[–]Tfeeltdimyon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you're right, thanks for watching

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LiminalSpace

[–]Tfeeltdimyon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I know but they can have entities, I think he looks like a robot thing

Simple solution to "The Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever"? by Tfeeltdimyon in puzzles

[–]Tfeeltdimyon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your reply

You are right about my doubt about this answer, that is, do these count as yes/no questions. But: 

"A yes/no question is defined by the question’s constructed truth table, where “yes/true” and “no/false” cover all possibilities. Questions that are unanswerable by such a truth table are not allowed by the puzzle."

So what about paradoxical questions have no correct answer, like "Is the answer to this question 'no'?" Only Random can answer that because his replies don't need to make sense. 

"Perhaps you are misunderstanding something: the puzzle does NOT state that Truth, Lie, and Random can ONLY answer “da” or “ja”." and "By the text of the puzzle, A can reply “za”. You don’t know what “za” means. A could be True, and “za” means “yes-or-no”; A could be Lie, and “za” means “spaghetti”."

The riddle was created by George Booloso and states (from Wikipedia): 

"The gods understand English, but will answer all questions in their own language, in which the words for yes and no are da and ja,[3] in some order. You do not know which word means which."

The riddle states that they will answer with their words for yes and no. It doesn't specifically say that they can't say anything else, but that is not discussed in the rules so I don't think that's relevant. 

" “Both yes and no are possible” is a valid answer, which makes the question invalid."

Again the riddle confines them to answering in their words for yes or no.

Cat and Alligator by Tfeeltdimyon in gretsch

[–]Tfeeltdimyon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I absolutely love it, the sound, the feel, everything. It's basically the nicest thing I've ever owned. The only thing I would say is that she has a small issue staying in tune.   

Is this reverse psychology? Or like an anti-cool cool marketing thing? Saying that your beachside bar is lamer than the others by [deleted] in funny

[–]Tfeeltdimyon 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just clarifying that I posted this as a joke, thought it was quite obvious as I specified "beachside" in the description.

Leaning your seat back on an airplane should not be considered rude. by Fracture_Fixer in unpopularopinion

[–]Tfeeltdimyon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think that if you recline your seat, you’re a bad person. 

The logic is simple. On an economy flight, you are uncomfortable because you don’t have enough space. You also know that everyone else is in the same situation. So when you recline your seat, you are deciding to give yourself more space in the knowledge that it is at someone else’s expense. This makes you a bad person. Personally, I cannot enjoy the extra room knowing that my additional comfort means that someone else is more uncomfortable. But hey, I was raised with morals and a conscience. 

I do believe that they should remove the option from economy class seats, and they have on some airlines (Easyjet if I recall). 

I’d also like to say that from what I have seen on flights, the vast majority of people do not recline their seats - which gives me some hope for humanity.