In both cases, "my father's son" has "father" and "son" cancel out: "I have no siblings (pt. 1: brothers and sisters / have I none) but his father/son is yours truly."
Twist: The guy was a knave from the island of knights and knaves, so he was lying! (For those who don't know, Smullyan wrote a lot of puzzles dealing with knights (who always tell the truth) and knaves (who always lie). Yeah, like those two guys who are always guarding a pair of doors for some unfathomable reason.)
@@pacattack2586 yes, but i mean the final answer of the question. it'd still have to be the son of whoever is mentioned in the last clause. i was just confused by your response initially
My guess is that the man has amnesia. Considering how his aforementioned criterion could never be definitively fulfilled.
In both cases, "my father's son" has "father" and "son" cancel out: "I have no siblings (pt. 1: brothers and sisters / have I none) but his father/son is yours truly."
The painting is of his son
Twist: The guy was a knave from the island of knights and knaves, so he was lying!
(For those who don't know, Smullyan wrote a lot of puzzles dealing with knights (who always tell the truth) and knaves (who always lie). Yeah, like those two guys who are always guarding a pair of doors for some unfathomable reason.)
0:40 it’s just himself
3:07 That makes sense
Jean leuk is about to summon the entire Bluey fandom
This isn't a riddle, its a literacy test
most riddles are literacy tests
Great ending
Q1.It's his son or one of his sons, just graph the tree in your head and nothing surprising.
Q2. So obvious question.
Alternative solution: Step brother. Typically speaking a 'step brother' isn't seen as a 'full brother'
You come upon three doorways guarded by three men. One always tells the truth. One always lies. And one stabs anyone who asks tricky questions. -XKCD
Wouldn't it technically be your step brother's son though in that case?
@@placeholder6974 No - because it's still your father's son, but not your brother. (You have to assume the step son has the same father though)
@@pacattack2586 yes, but i mean the final answer of the question. it'd still have to be the son of whoever is mentioned in the last clause. i was just confused by your response initially
The answer changes if you xeither change the “father” into “son” like he did xor change the “is” after it into “of” (implying the article)
I follow your playlist for graph theory. Can you please make a video on chromatic polynomial?
Bon Dieu! C'est pas mal fou! 😮
😃
Therian?