You will ask any one of them the following question pointing to any one of the door.
will your other friend tell ,behind this door is a coffer overflowing with jewels and gold, along with an exit?.
If the answer is yes that is not the door vice versa if the answer is no then that is the door behind which
is a coffer overflowing with jewels and gold, along with an exit.
I CAN EXPLAIN THE LOGIC BEHIND THAT QUESTIAN.
Both the knight & the knave know each other .Suppose you ask the knave the question,he knows that
is the door leading to the coffer overflowing with jewels and gold, along with an exit,& also know the knight will say yes,
but as he is always telling the lies he will say NO.In the other case if you are asking the knight, he also will say no,because he
know the knave is always telling the lies...
On Friday, 4 December 2015, 4:17, "Meera Neelakantan meeraneela@yahoo.com [worldmalayaliclub]" <worldmalayaliclub@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
You are in a room with 2 doors leading out.
Behind 1 door is a coffer overflowing with jewels and gold, along with an exit. Behind the other door is an enormous, hungry lion that will pounce on anyone opening the door.
You do not know which door leads to the treasure and exit, and which door leads to the lion.
In the room you are in are 2 individuals. The first is a knight, who always tells the truth, and a knave, who always lies.
Both of these individuals know what is behind each door. You do not know which individual is the knight, or which one is the knave.
You may ask one of the individuals exactly 1 question.
What should you ask in order to be certain that you will open the door with the coffer behind it, instead of the hungry lion?
Behind 1 door is a coffer overflowing with jewels and gold, along with an exit. Behind the other door is an enormous, hungry lion that will pounce on anyone opening the door.
You do not know which door leads to the treasure and exit, and which door leads to the lion.
In the room you are in are 2 individuals. The first is a knight, who always tells the truth, and a knave, who always lies.
Both of these individuals know what is behind each door. You do not know which individual is the knight, or which one is the knave.
You may ask one of the individuals exactly 1 question.
What should you ask in order to be certain that you will open the door with the coffer behind it, instead of the hungry lion?
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Posted by: BABU GEORGE <anubacy@yahoo.com>
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