But he can't shave himself because he shaves only those who do not shave themselves. — Gregory
Suppose we have a town with three men: a barber (B), a philosopher (P) who doesn't shave himself, and a mathematician (M) who does.
Now define a set R as all and only men who shave all and only men who don't shave themselves.
1. M is never a member of R because he shaves a man who shaves himself.
2. P can't be a member either because he doesn't shave himself, so he'd have to shave himself to be a member, but he doesn't.
3. What about B? He would have to shave P and not M. No problem. If he shaves himself, he'd be out, like M, but if he doesn't, he'd be out like P. So B can't be a member no matter what he does.
So R = { }. No one shaves all and only men who do not shave themselves, therefore the barber does not shave all and only men who do not shave themselves. The three cases are exhaustive, in fact: no one can be a member of R whether they shave themselves or not. — Srap Tasmaner
Number 2 is wrong. The philosopher doesn't shave himself so he is in the set of those who shave all those who do not themselves. — Gregory
You tried to add another loop Srap but it's the same paradox, which I already solved and I don't know why you guys don't get it. I read your post very slowly, slowing my heart rate, and it's clear this paradox is making something at of nothing — Gregory
The barber shaves those and only those who do not shave themselves
So there are perhaps people who do not shave themselves whom he does not shave. And those who shave themselves he does not shave. But he can't shave himself because he shaves only those who do not shave themselves. So anyone can shave the barber except himself
Solved? — Gregory
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