and is thus a paradox of the form, “If the barber shaves everyone who doesn’t shave themselves, does the barber shave him/herself?”
That isn’t a paradox. It is a simple logical question with the answer yes.
Hm, I guess that should probably be, “if the barber shaves only those who don’t shave themselves.”
“if and only if”-type language has to enter into.
If the barber shaves all and only those who don’t save themselves...
don’t save themselves...
Cracked me up. I think you might mean “shave” here.
Oh no! The barber of Seville is coming! I’ll hold him off, you save yourself!
But what if I run into the barber of Fleet Street?!
That isn’t a paradox. It is a simple logical question with the answer yes.
Hm, I guess that should probably be, “if the barber shaves only those who don’t shave themselves.”
“if and only if”-type language has to enter into.
If the barber shaves all and only those who don’t save themselves...
Cracked me up. I think you might mean “shave” here.
Oh no! The barber of Seville is coming! I’ll hold him off, you save yourself!
But what if I run into the barber of Fleet Street?!