It’s actually the same tactic as the Weasley twins used to cover the “engaged to Ginever Weasley” story- plant so many make newspaper reports that everyone gets confused. And it kinda happens again after the Hermione/Draco incident. Guess Eliezer like the theme of people not being able to discern the truth from wild rumours if the truth’s weird enough.
To be fair, it’s really hard to figure out WTF is going on when humans are involved. Their reasoning is the result of multiple motivations and a vast array of potential reasoning errors. If you don’t believe me try the following board games with your friends: Avalon, Coup, Sheriff of Nottingham, Battlestar Galactica, or any that involve secrets and lying.
It’s actually the same tactic as the Weasley twins used to cover the “engaged to Ginever Weasley” story- plant so many make newspaper reports that everyone gets confused. And it kinda happens again after the Hermione/Draco incident. Guess Eliezer like the theme of people not being able to discern the truth from wild rumours if the truth’s weird enough.
Oh, trust me, they can’t discern the truth from wild rumors even if it’s normal. (I am speaking of real life, here.)
To be fair, it’s really hard to figure out WTF is going on when humans are involved. Their reasoning is the result of multiple motivations and a vast array of potential reasoning errors. If you don’t believe me try the following board games with your friends: Avalon, Coup, Sheriff of Nottingham, Battlestar Galactica, or any that involve secrets and lying.
There’s a Battlestar Galactica board game? :D
Yes, yes there is :). http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/37111/battlestar-galactica
Mmhmm. I find it quite fun, despite having no familiarity with the show.