There are questions for which you don’t know the answerability, so either the rules must be that questions asked are provably answerable, or else you are allowed to glean information from whether the god answers it or not.
Assuming that True and False do not know the future results of questions to Random, an example is a question to A (True) of “Would B say 1 + 1 = 2?” If B is False, it is answerable (with a ‘no’). If B is Random, it is unanswerable.
Do True and False know what answer Random would give, or are they required to say “I don’t know?”
I interpreted it to mean that the question must be answerable with yes or no.
There are questions for which you don’t know the answerability, so either the rules must be that questions asked are provably answerable, or else you are allowed to glean information from whether the god answers it or not.
Assuming that True and False do not know the future results of questions to Random, an example is a question to A (True) of “Would B say 1 + 1 = 2?” If B is False, it is answerable (with a ‘no’). If B is Random, it is unanswerable.
Provably answerable from your own knowledge.