The unexpected hanging paradox: The warden tells a prisoner on death row that he will be executed on some day in the following week (last possible day is Friday) at noon, and that he will be surprised when he gets hanged. The prisoner realizes that he will not be hanged on Friday, because that being the last possible day, he would see it coming. It follows that Thursday is effectively the last day that he can be hanged, but by the same reasoning, he would then be unsurprised to be hanged on Thursday, and Wednesday is the last day he can be hanged. He follows this reasoning all the way back and realizes that he cannot be hanged any day that week at noon without him knowing it in advance. The hangman comes for him on Wednesday, and he is surprised.
Supposedly, even though the warden’s statement to the prisoner was paradoxical, it ended up being true anyway. However, If the prisoner is no better at making inferences than he is in the problem, the warden’s statement is true and not paradoxical; the prisoner was executed at noon within the week, and was surprised. This just shows that you can mess with the minds of people who can’t make inferences properly. Nothing new there.
If the prisoner can evaluate the warden’s statement properly, then the prisoner follows the same logic, realizes that he will not be hanged at noon within the week, remembers that the warden told him that he would be, and concludes that the warden’s statements must be unreliable, and does not use them to predict actual events with confidence. If the hangman comes for him at noon any day that week, he will be unsurprised, even though he is not confident that he will be executed that week at all either. The warden’s statement is then false and unparadoxical. This is similar to the one-day analogue, where the warden says “You will be executed tomorrow at noon, and will be surprised” and the prisoner says “wtf?”.
Now let’s assume that the prisoner can make these inferences, the warden always tells the truth, and the prisoner knows this. Well then, yes, that’s a paradox. But assigning 100% probability to each of two propositions that contradict each other completely destroys any probability distribution, making the prisoner still unable to make predictions, and without giving the warden the honor of being completely correct in the end.
Resolving the unexpected hanging paradox
The unexpected hanging paradox: The warden tells a prisoner on death row that he will be executed on some day in the following week (last possible day is Friday) at noon, and that he will be surprised when he gets hanged. The prisoner realizes that he will not be hanged on Friday, because that being the last possible day, he would see it coming. It follows that Thursday is effectively the last day that he can be hanged, but by the same reasoning, he would then be unsurprised to be hanged on Thursday, and Wednesday is the last day he can be hanged. He follows this reasoning all the way back and realizes that he cannot be hanged any day that week at noon without him knowing it in advance. The hangman comes for him on Wednesday, and he is surprised.
Supposedly, even though the warden’s statement to the prisoner was paradoxical, it ended up being true anyway. However, If the prisoner is no better at making inferences than he is in the problem, the warden’s statement is true and not paradoxical; the prisoner was executed at noon within the week, and was surprised. This just shows that you can mess with the minds of people who can’t make inferences properly. Nothing new there.
If the prisoner can evaluate the warden’s statement properly, then the prisoner follows the same logic, realizes that he will not be hanged at noon within the week, remembers that the warden told him that he would be, and concludes that the warden’s statements must be unreliable, and does not use them to predict actual events with confidence. If the hangman comes for him at noon any day that week, he will be unsurprised, even though he is not confident that he will be executed that week at all either. The warden’s statement is then false and unparadoxical. This is similar to the one-day analogue, where the warden says “You will be executed tomorrow at noon, and will be surprised” and the prisoner says “wtf?”.
Now let’s assume that the prisoner can make these inferences, the warden always tells the truth, and the prisoner knows this. Well then, yes, that’s a paradox. But assigning 100% probability to each of two propositions that contradict each other completely destroys any probability distribution, making the prisoner still unable to make predictions, and without giving the warden the honor of being completely correct in the end.