peptoabysmal
Illuminator
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2002
- Messages
- 3,466
Upchurch said:In this case, "shrimp" does not specifically mean "a small thing", but rather Penaeus plebejus. So, when you are saying "jumbo shrimp", you are not saying "a really big small thing", but "a really big Penaeus plebejus".
However, for "known unknown", you are using two contradictory forms of the same concept. To know that you don't know something does not give you any particular insight into that something, thus it remains an unknown.
To use an analogy, adding a negative one is identical to simply subtracting one. i.e.:
x + (-1) = x - 1
Likewise, a known unknown is simply unknown.
Just for the sake of picking nits:
Penaeus plebejus is eastern king prawn.
Jumbo shrimp is Penaeus monodon.
Gramatically a "known unknown" is incorrect, however since you are considering the statement as boolean logic between two states "known" and "unknown":
There is no operator between known and unknown (well now there is), so we don't really know the logic intended. You are considering just the possibility of known OR unknown. How about known AND unknown or any other of 32 possible permutations for a 2 input logic gate? Can two opposite states work in conjunction to produce more than two states? It's how the computer I'm typing on right now works.