I've made a simple graphic that might help figure out the solution


I will have a look at it. Actually, I have a typo as well, because it can be logically proven that there must be a tiger in room 2 and 8, not 3 and 8 as I wrote. Room 3 can never have a tiger.Demivec wrote:@Trond: Thanks for correcting my typo in the 'given' statement. The rest of the logic holds however. Do you see any logical errors in what I posted?
Nope. If 3 is true, then 2 cannot be empty.If #3 is True then room #2 is empty
3. Room 2 and 7 are not empty.
No, it contains a tiger and is false. The whole concept of "fluctuating thruthness" just doesn't work.but we know that room #2's sign is both True and False ( and thus contains neither the princess (True) nor the tiger (False)
@Trond: From my perspective that would be the heart of the matter. A better term would be infinite regress.Trond wrote:No, it contains a tiger and is false. The whole concept of "fluctuating thruthness" just doesn't work.but we know that room #2's sign is both True and False ( and thus contains neither the princess (True) nor the tiger (False)
ThanksDemivec wrote:@GeoTrail: Nice illustration.

No. You dont know if it's true and if it's true it could be any other room with a odd number.utopiomania wrote:"The sign on the door of the princess was true"
"7. The princess is in a room with an odd number."
The sign on door 7 is unchallenged, isn't it? So she is in room 7. The rest is just smoke and mirrors.

Why not?No. You dont know if it's true

Ok, I understand now. I think your basic logic is solid, but you overinterpret it when making it into sign truth values.A better term would be infinite regress.
The key here is realizing that 8 only is fluctuating if it contains a tiger and sign 3 is false. If sign 3 is true, then the truth value of 8 stop fluctuating. Thus we know that sign 3 must be true.If #8 is true the room contains a tiger -> if #8 contains a tiger it has to be False -> if #8 is False it cannot contain a tiger or sign #3 is True ( via !(A and B) = (!A or !B) ).
No sign can be both true and false. Either it's true, or it's false. It can be logically proven that sign 2 is always false. Thus it cannot contain the princess, but it may contain a tiger. Here too is the key in realizing that the truth value of 2 is fluctuating if you set the sign to true, but it is not fluctuating (it stays false) if you set the sign to false. Thus we know it must be false.but we know that room #2's sign is both True and False
No, but no sign says that it is true. So you dont know it. You have to look at the other rooms.utopiomania wrote: Which of the other signs says that 7 is not true?
PMV wrote:No one read my post?... was that english so bad?
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I could write it in german and another can translate it![]()
MFG PMV
Correct.If princess in room 1 or 4, then one is true and not empty, so the other room must contain the tiger and the sign must be false, but then the sign is true. No princess.
Correct.If princess in room 2, the sign must be true, but then it can't be true, because then princess is not allowed to be in this room. No princess.
Nope. If princess is in room 3, sign 2 and 7 must be false. Because sign 3 says room 2 and 7 are not empty. So there must be something in them. In other words, if princess is in room 3, there must be tigers in room 2 and 7. And that means these have to be false, not true.If princess in room 3, sign 2 and 7 are true.
Correct.If princess in room 5, sign 6 must be true. Sign 6 needs sign 2 to be false. Sign 2 needs sign 5 to be false, but there should be the princess, impossible. No princess.
If princess in room 6, the problem will be repeated. No princess.
Correct.If princess in room 7, the 7 must be a odd number, true. Princess can be here.
Correct.If princess in room 8, the sign says there is a tiger, so it can't be. No princess
lol, i should read carefully, i had read "room 2 or 7" but it is "room 2 and 7"Trond wrote:Nope. If princess is in room 3, sign 2 and 7 must be false. Because sign 3 says room 2 and 7 are not empty. So there must be something in them. In other words, if princess is in room 3, there must be tigers in room 2 and 7. And that means these have to be false, not true.If princess in room 3, sign 2 and 7 are true.