| Does this formulation work? You have 6 wooden blocks, each can be 1 of 6 colors. There will always be either (A) 3 blocks of the same color, or (B) 3 blocks of different colors. Iterating through all possibilities: 6 of 1 color - case A 5 of 1 color, 1 of another - case A 4 of 1 color, 2 of another - case A 4 of 1 color, 1 of another, 1 of yet another - case A and B 3 of 1 color, 3 of another - case A 3 of 1 color, 2 of another, 1 of yet another - case A and B 3 of 1 color, 1 of another, 1 of yet another, 1 of another another - case A and B 2 of 1 color, 2 of another, 2 of yet another - case B 2 of 1 color, 2 of another, 1 of yet another, 1 of another another - case B 2 of 1 color, 1 of another, 1 of yet another, 1 of another another, 1 of another another another - case B all colors different - case B |
As an exercise, try repeating your same argument for 5 colors/blocks, and note that it still works, when it shouldn't.
[1] - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:RamseyTheory_K5_no_m...