rhetoric - What is a word for a question that has no answer because it is seemingly invalid?
A friend of mine posted a riddle on Facebook involving adding money and then subtracting money. It ended with a question asking where $1 went, but the trick was that there was no discrepancy, so the $1 didn't exist.
The question: Three guys walk into a hotel, and they're going to split the cost of a room. The room is $30. They each kick in $10 and head up to their room. The manager gets wind of it and tells the clerk the room is only $25. He hands five $1 bills to the bell hop and tells him to go refund the guys' money. On the way up to the room, the bell hop gets to thinking, as bell hops are wont to do, and says to himself, "No way can three guys split $5, I'm going to help out." He stuffs $2 in his pocket, knocks on the door, gives each guy back a buck and heads back downstairs to the desk, glowing in the warmth of a job well done. So now each guy has paid $9. $9 times 3 is $27 plus $2 the bell hop stole--only $29! Where is the other buck?
(I bolded the question)
I said the question was invalid, but my friend pointed out that every question is valid to ask.
What would I call this question that has no answer? (If I understand correctly rhetorical is when you can answer the question, but it is not meant to be answered, so by that definition "rhetorical" would be invalid here.)
Answer
The specific example you posted is technically a riddle:
A riddle is a statement or question or phrase having a double or veiled meaning, put forth as a puzzle to be solved.
That doesn't really answer the more generic question in your title, however. Nor does it address your friend's assertion that all questions are valid. Strictly speaking, not all questions are valid:
What grik plah mot?
This is completely nonsensical regardless of it being phrased as a question. Even restricting oneself to valid English words it is possible to construct invalid questions:
What does the color 9 smell like?
These forms of questions can be described as fallacious. There is an entire list of appropriate fallacies but the most common in terms of questions would be:
- false dilemma — presenting two options as if they are the only choices available
- loaded question — asking a question such that any answer would be false or misleading
- false assumption — beginning your question with an assumption or assertion that is untrue
- non sequitur — asking a question such that the question makes no sense given the description of the scenario
The $1 riddle is an example of a non sequitur. The logic within the puzzle does not flow properly and the question at the end does not follow from the given scenario. Here is Wikipedia's description of the fallacy:
The term is often used in everyday speech and reasoning to describe a statement in which premise and conclusion are totally unrelated but which is used as if they were.
Their article more directly addresses the form related to formal logic but the principle holds. Here is the (slightly trimmed) riddle with the non sequitur highlighted:
Three guys split the cost of $30. They each kick in $10. The manager tells the clerk the room is only $25. He hands five $1 bills to the clerk and tells him to refund the money. The bell hop says to himself, "No way can three guys split $5, I'm going to help out." He stuffs $2 in his pocket, knocks on the door, gives each guy back a buck. So now each guy has paid $9. $9 times 3 is $27 plus $2 the bell hop stole--only $29! Where is the other buck?
Asking where the other buck is has nothing to do with the exchanges that happened earlier in the question.
By the way, as Martha pointed out in the comments, the correct action would have been to subtract the bellhop's $2 which arrives at $25, which is the cost of the room.
Comments
Post a Comment