There's more than one possible day in August, which would mean Bernie could not know the date, if it was in August. Therefore it must be July.Isn't there a step missing. How does he eliminate the August dates.
There's more than one possible day in August, which would mean Bernie could not know the date, if it was in August. Therefore it must be July.Isn't there a step missing. How does he eliminate the August dates.
Simpler answer
Don't be friend with Cheryl. Because Cheryl is an asshole of a friend..
I'm re-thinking this again now, and I used a matrix this time.Yes you can eliminate those months. Albert KNOWS that Bernard doesn't know the date. How can he know that?
He had to have been told a month where EVERY day was duplicated in another month, and the only months like that are July and August. If Albert had been told May or June then it is possible Bernard heard a unique day and knows her birthday, but Albert says that isn't the case. So, he wasn't told May or June, he was told July or August.
That enabled Bernard to figure out it was July or August which was enough information for him to figure out her birthday. Which proves he wasn't told 14, since in that case he wouldn't be able to figure it out.
After that is where I got stuck. I had to read the answer to understand that it can only be July.
I'm re-thinking this again now, and I used a matrix this time.
1. If Albert was told May, Bernard's silence doesn't mean you can exclude May because he could've been told it was either the 15th or 16th, which occur in other months (August and July, respectively). We know Bernard wasn't told the 19th, a unique day, wherein the solution is self-evident. Therefore, Albert knows that Bernard has more choices and has no other way of narrowing down his options.
2. If Albert was told June, then Bernard's silence means he wasn't told the 18th, being a unique day, in which case Albert would immediately proclaim the answer. Since Albert admits to still not knowing, it can't be June, which is the only month we can exclude.
3. If Albert was told July, the birthday can be either the 14th or 16th, so he still doesn't know. Bernard is silent because he could've been told the 14th, 15th, 16th and 17th, each occurring in 2 months. His comment can't narrow down the possibilities.
4. If Albert was told August, it can be either the 14th, 15th and 17th. Just like point 3., Bernard's silence or comment doesn't exclude the possibilities.
Why would their presumptuous comments foretell the solution? Am I missing something here?
IMO, every step of the thing falls out just fine, logically, without our having to know any (unwritten) rules.
Albert knows the month but not the day
Bernard knows the day but not the month.
If the day is 18, Bernard, who knows the day, can immediately pin down the month as being june. The same if the day is 19 -- Bernard can immediately pin down the month as may.
But Albert, who knows the month, reports that he knows that Bernard does not know the month.
Bernard deduces, from this report, that the month must be july or august, because, if the month were may or june, Albert (who knows the month) could not be certain that Bernard could not pin the month.
So at this point, Albert has deduced that the day is 14, 15, 16, or 17, and Bernard has deduced that the month is july or august.
Next, Bernard reports that he now knows the month.
Now, day 14 is available in both july and august. Therefore, if the day were 14, Bernard would not be able to tell between july and august. But Bernard has reported that he can pin down the month. So Albert knows the day is not 14. That leaves 15, 16, 17 as the possible days.
But Bernard now knows the month. If the day is 15, Bernard cannot pin the month, because 15 appears on Cheryl’s list in both july and august. The same is true of 17, which also appears in both july and august. Only if the day is 16, can Bernard pin the month, i.e july, because 16 appears only in july.
So Albert can deduce, from the fact that Bernard says he knows the month, that the day must be 16.
In other words, Cheryl’s birthday is july 16th.
Every step follows in logical sequence as the new facts are laid out.
I'm having my chocolate and tea break darling. (Wish I can break away to be with you girl).Don't you have work to do? Get back to work!![]()
You haven't understood the "trick". Bernard's silence isn't relevant, Albert knows Bernard doesn't know her birthday based only on information known to Albert. If Bernard said he knew, Albert would know someone is lying.I'm re-thinking this again now, and I used a matrix this time.
1. If Albert was told May, Bernard's silence doesn't mean you can exclude May because he could've been told it was either the 15th or 16th
You haven't understood the "trick". Bernard's silence isn't relevant, Albert knows Bernard doesn't know her birthday based only on information known to Albert. If Bernard said he knew, Albert would know someone is lying.
Albert knows the month, and based on that SPECIFIC month, he can see that no matter what date Bernard heard, Bernard doesn't know the date. That is because the month Albert has been told does not include any days like 18 or 19 that are definitive.
Put it another way:
Bernard CAN'T have been told 18 or 19 because at Albert can see that July doesn't contain 19, July only contains days that would all leave Bernard unsure. If Albert had been told May, then he couldn't be sure whether Bernard knows or not, because one of the days in May is a gimme.
Silence from both guys is relevant to US in ascertaining that June can be excluded for either the 17th or the 18th.You haven't understood the "trick". Bernard's silence isn't relevant, Albert knows Bernard doesn't know her birthday based only on information known to Albert. If Bernard said he knew, Albert would know someone is lying.
Albert knows the month, and based on that SPECIFIC month, he can see that no matter what date Bernard heard, Bernard doesn't know the date. That is because the month Albert has been told does not include any days like 18 or 19 that are definitive.
Put it another way:
Bernard CAN'T have been told 18 or 19 because at Albert can see that July doesn't contain 19, July only contains days that would all leave Bernard unsure. If Albert had been told May, then he couldn't be sure whether Bernard knows or not, because one of the days in May is a gimme.
Mine too. Too many assumptions - it assumes that given a unique day Bernard is smart enough to recognize the month ... he could be an idiot ..My head really hurts.
Because if he were told May he couldn't be sure that Bernard doesn't know her birthday.How do you know that Albert wasn't told May?
Buttercup, you are really close, bute note that the 15th is in both May and August, and the 17th appears in both June and August. (You put them both in July.) May and June are eliminated by this point.But Bernard now knows the month. If the day is 15, Bernard cannot pin the month, because 15 appears on Cheryl’s list in both july and august. The same is true of 17, which also appears in both july and august. Only if the day is 16, can Bernard pin the month, i.e july, because 16 appears only in july.
16 appears in May too, not just July.Buttercup, you are really close, bute note that the 15th is in both May and August, and the 17th appears in both June and August. (You put them both in July.) May and June are eliminated by this point.
May is eliminated exactly like June is.16 appears in May too, not just July.
I can see how June is eliminated because we know it's not June 18th (a unique day that gives away the month), otherwise Bernard would say so, but since he didn't, then Albert would have said so, had he been told it was June, because it can only be the 17th.
But if Bernard is told the 15th, he doesn't know whether it's May or August.
If Albert is told May, he doesn't know if it's the 15th or the 16th. So how can one eliminate May in this scenario?
Because if he were told May he couldn't be sure that Bernard doesn't know her birthday.
If he was told May, Bernard could have been told any of 15, 16, or 19. In that case there is a chance Bernard knows her birthday, it could be May 19. But Albert said he is sure Bernard doesn't know so it can't be May.
Specifically, for the month Albert was told every listed day had a duplicate in another month. This is how he is sure Bernard doesn't know.
Only if Albert were told June or July can he be SURE that Bernard doesn't know. In June and July any of the days have another month possible. So Albert must have been told June or July.
You are getting hung up on silence, the problem can be solved without considering silence. It can be solved by considering only the information explicitly carried by their statements.
Cool story broWithout even checking, I'm going July 16.
When Albert says "I don't know when your birthday is, but I know Bernard doesn't know, either."
- Bernard would know if the Number was 18 or 19
- The month can't be May or June (where 18 and 19 exist)
- The month must be July or August
When Bernard says "I didn't know originally, but now I do."
- He knows it's in July or August based on the above
- If the number were 14 he wouldn't know, so it must be 15, 16 or 17
- That leaves July 16, August 15 and August 17
- At this point Bernard knows (16 = July 16)
When Albert says "Well, now I know, too!"
- If he had August as a month he wouldn't know, so he must have July. He knows it isn't the 14th (or Bernard wouldn't know) so it must be the 16th
May and June have unique dates. May 18 and june 19Albert's statement that he's sure Bernard doesn't know, merely means that Bernard was told any day other than the 18th or the 19th, because any other of those days have duplicates in a second month.
Other than June as previously resolved, your explanation doesn't reduce the possibilities.