ous;
(2) When two men of the same height are on opposite sides in Politics,
if one of them has his admirers, so also has the other;
(3) Brothers, who avoid general Society, look well when walking
together;
(4) Whenever you find two men, who differ in Politics and in their views
of Society, and who are not both of them ugly, you may be sure that they
look well when walking together;
(5) Ugly men, who look well when walking together, are not both of them
free from self-consciousness;
(6) Brothers, who differs in Politics, and are not both of them
handsome, never give themselves airs;
(7) John declines to go into Society, but never gives himself airs;
(8) Brothers, who are apt to be self-conscious, though not _both_ of
them handsome, usually dislike Society;
(9) Men of the same height, who do not give themselves airs, are free
from self-consciousness;
(10) Men, who agree on questions of Art, though they differ in Politics,
and who are not both of them ugly, are always admired;
(11) Men, who hold opposite views about Art and are not admired, always
give themselves airs;
(12) Brothers of the same height always differ in Politics;
(13) Two handsome men, who are neither both of them admired nor both of
them self-conscious, are no doubt of different heights;
(14) Brothers, who are self-conscious, and do not both of them like
Society, never look well when walking together.
[N.B. See Note at end of Problem 2.]
pg194
8.
(1) A man can always master his father;
(2) An inferior of a man's uncle owes that man money;
(3) The father of an enemy of a friend of a man owes that man nothing;
(4) A man is always persecuted by his son's creditors;
(5) An inferior of the master of a man's son is senior to that man;
(6) A grandson of a man's junior is not his nephew;
(7) A servant of an inferior of a friend of a man's enemy is never
persecuted by that man;
(8) A friend of a superior of the master of a man's victim is that man's
enemy;
(9) An enemy of a persecutor of a servant of a man's father is that
man's friend.
The Problem is to deduce some fact about great-grandsons.
[N.B. In this Problem, it is assumed that all the men, here
referred to, live in the same town, and that every pair of them
are either "friends" or "enemies," that every pair are related
as "senior and junior", "superior and inferio
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