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No horse has five legs. One horse has four more legs than no horse. Therefore, one horse has nine legs.

No Horse is the name of the horse and No Horse has five legs therefore One Horse (which is also a name) has four more than five which is nine legs.

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And how is that a riddle exactly?

It's a logic problem, Darklighter is making a logic induction that is false and is asking implicitly why it is false.

I think that the first assumption can not be taken as a base for this implication, therefore all the statement does not make sense!

Like Writersblock said: "No horse has infinite legs... therefore one horse has infinite +4 legs" which means that one horse has infinite legs (infinite + 4 = infinite) which is absurd coz we started with the assumption that no horse has infinite legs!!!

I hope I was clear in that...

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No horse has five legs. One horse has four more legs than no horse. Therefore, one horse has nine legs.

So the horse has two legs at the back

and fo(u)r-legs at the front

Three small riders of which one has a leg missing

the answer is it's a eleven legged, four headed talking horse (Mr Eds)

edit=can't count or spell

Edited by Lost in space
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And how is that a riddle exactly?

This isn't a riddle. This is a classic example of the problems with propositional logic.

Using the phrase "no horse" in the first sentences to mean two different things can lead to unintended consequences with a crazy conclusion (that a horse has 9 legs).

The first sentence is true using the phrase "no horse" to mean "not true for any horse". However, the phrase "no horse" needs to mean "none exist" for the second sentence to be true. Putting them together, with the two different meanings, leads to a 9 legged horse.

Interesting, but not a riddle. Belongs in a different forum.

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This isn't a riddle. This is a classic example of the problems with propositional logic.

Using the phrase "no horse" in the first sentences to mean two different things can lead to unintended consequences with a crazy conclusion (that a horse has 9 legs).

The first sentence is true using the phrase "no horse" to mean "not true for any horse". However, the phrase "no horse" needs to mean "none exist" for the second sentence to be true. Putting them together, with the two different meanings, leads to a 9 legged horse.

Interesting, but not a riddle. Belongs in a different forum.

Right. It's akin to me saying, "Nobody's perfect, but I'm just a nobody. So I'm perfect."

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So the horse has two legs at the back

and fo(u)r-legs at the front

Three small riders of which one has a leg missing

the answer is it's a eleven legged, four headed talking horse (Mr Eds)

edit=can't count or spell

You consistently make me lol :D

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