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by ineedasername
2743 days ago
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You're simply playing semantics and defining "puzzle" as "something that has a solution". But if you're at work and your boss says "I have a puzzle I need you to solve: Given these constraints, find an answer" You need to be able to say "Here is my solution" or "No solution is possible, and here is why." Or take something simpler: a 500 piece "Puzzle" only there's a manufacturing defect in all copies: one piece is miss shaped. The puzzle can't be completed; there is no "solution". It's still a puzzle. So no, you don't get to "unfair!" your way out of the MU Puzzle through narrow semantic definitions, especially given the, well, grammatical nature of language, because then you have gone and missed the entire point. |
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