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Logical Limbo (Posted on 2002-08-12) Difficulty: 4 of 5
Prove that either

a) this problem is solvable

or

b) this problem is unsolvable

See The Solution Submitted by Cheradenine    
Rating: 3.2000 (15 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Reducto ad absurdum? | Comment 31 of 33 |
Wouldn't it be possible to use the common mathematical process of Reducto ad Absurdum on this?

We start out by assuming B is true, meaning there is no solution. However, in providing the solution (b), we have provided a solution to the problem, meaning that there is a solution to a problem, which is a direct contradiction to b. So ergo, because by assuming B is true we run into a contradiction, there must be a solution. Therefore, a.

We can also try to prove a is false with Reducto ad Absurdum: Assume a is true. Since a is true, there is a solution. Since a is a solution there is a solution. This means there is no contradiction, and Reducto ad Absurdum fails.

By analyzing the problem itself, and supposing "s" represents that the problem has a solution, we get...
If: a or b then s
If: b then not s

In doing so, we say that if: b then s and not s, which is a direct contradiction, hence the answer is a.

I'm sure there's a hole in my logic somewhere, but I can't see it right now, as it's kind of late. Feel free to point it out to me, if it's there, of course.
  Posted by Sniper59 on 2003-10-31 23:16:25
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