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dejsmith
Joined: 23 Oct 2005 Posts: 42
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Posted: Tue Aug 03, 2010 5:51 pm Post subject: Puzzle 10/7/31 A |
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Danny, sorry to be behind & that is why I am not broadcasting this. But I do not understand an apparent contradiction I see in the Kraken/Almost X Wing Peterj presented. Using ttt's candidate profiles, Peterj's route to include r7c8<>7 makes sense. But, if you take the route from r1c7=7 to r8c7=8, then you get the opposite that r7c8=7? That is why when I applied this Kraken/Almost X Wing, I only made eliminations in r23c8. How do you account for this apparent contradiction in r7c8? What am I not understanding?
Thanks...Dave |
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daj95376
Joined: 23 Aug 2008 Posts: 3854
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Posted: Tue Aug 03, 2010 11:48 pm Post subject: |
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Hello Dave, I'm always glad to help. Let's hope that I succeed in this case.
Here is the grid used by peterj. I'll start at the beginning, but I believe your answer will be at the end.
Code: | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 14 9 5 | *14678 168 2 | @478 *1678 3 |
| 2 1478 147 | 14678 3 678 | 4789 1689-7 5 |
| 3 1478 6 | 1478 9 5 | 2 18-7 78 |
|-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------|
| 146 146 9 | 3 2 678 | 178 5 78 |
| 8 5 2 | *79 4 1 | 3 *79 6 |
| 7 16 3 | 689 5 68 | 189 4 2 |
|-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------|
| 146 2 147 | 168 168 3 | 5 8-7 9 |
| 5 167 17 | 2 168 9 | 78 3 4 |
| 9 3 8 | 5 7 4 | 6 2 1 |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
# 71 eliminations remain
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1) For <7>, either the (*) cells are true for the X-Wing or else cell (@) r1c7 is true.
2) If the (*) cells are true, then r23c4<>7 and r237c8<>7.
3) The (@) cell is a fin cell and a finned X-Wing exists for r23c8<>7.
However, peterj was greedy and wanted r237c8<>7. So, he decided to pursue a Kraken X-Wing instead of accepting the finned X-Wing. This meant that he needed a chain from r1c7 to r5c8 ... and he found it. Now, here's where your quandry fits into the picture.
4a) If you start with a true assumption, then everything that follows must be true. This is half of what makes true/false (conjugate) logic work.
4b) It you start with a false assumption, then nothing can be said for certain about what follows.
4c) What makes conjugate logic work is the overlapping of the conclusions from the conjugate starting points. You no longer need to know which assumption is true/false, only that the false assumption leads to some conclusions in common with the true assumption.
Peter found a chain that had three eliminations in common with the X-Wing -- r237c8<>7. Your chain found two eliminations in common with the X-Wing -- r23c8<>7. In the case of this puzzle, assuming r1c7=7 happens to be a false assumption -- for your chain and peterj's chain. So, recalling (4b), it's no surprise that the results of your chain differed from peterj's chain. Okay?
===== ===== ===== ===== =====
An example of false assumption logic in the real world.
False Assumption -> False Conclusion: (7)r1c7 - (7)r1c8
False Assumption -> True Conclusion: (7)r1c7 - (7)r1c4
Regards, Danny |
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dejsmith
Joined: 23 Oct 2005 Posts: 42
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Posted: Wed Aug 04, 2010 12:41 am Post subject: |
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Thanks Danny. I'll start paying more attention to everyone's posts about Krakens. I must admit my solving techniques have always aligned closer to Marty's; and I probably take the cake for MOST steps required; but I really enjoy your puzzles & everyones' comments. Because of you guys, I am broadening out, & trying to learn & apply some of these new (for me) techniques.
Dave |
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