Not on the literal level, I guess. Of the answers that are true, choose the most specific one (the one that allows the fewest possibilities/provides the most information).
I have never heard the term “visual migraines” before. I have experienced a bunch of different visual effects but it’s hard for me to decide which qualify and estimating quantity is also hard.
Yeah. I think Christian’s issue is it’s possible for multiple answers to be logically true at the same time (but an inclination to give the most specific answer of a given set is basic pragmatics (but maybe it isn’t always obvious for a set of propositions whether or not there’s a specificity hierarchy between them, various kinds of infinities, for instance, are tricky to prove to be subsets of each other))
I found the questions hard to answer. I don’t think the terms in #2 are well enough defined to give a good answer.
Not on the literal level, I guess. Of the answers that are true, choose the most specific one (the one that allows the fewest possibilities/provides the most information).
Question 2 seemed clear enough to me. That’s the one about visual migraines, yes?
I have never heard the term “visual migraines” before. I have experienced a bunch of different visual effects but it’s hard for me to decide which qualify and estimating quantity is also hard.
Yeah. I think Christian’s issue is it’s possible for multiple answers to be logically true at the same time (but an inclination to give the most specific answer of a given set is basic pragmatics (but maybe it isn’t always obvious for a set of propositions whether or not there’s a specificity hierarchy between them, various kinds of infinities, for instance, are tricky to prove to be subsets of each other))