This is one of my personal favourites, but still- The point is that despite being [partially] beside the tortoise, he is not completely next to it. Therefore he still needs to reach were the tortoise is now before he can pass it. By the time he's reached were the tortoise is now, it will have moved forward some more. This just goes on.Kjakings said:I cry bullshit. This is silly. You can quite clearly tell it is bullshit: by panel 5, Achilles is seemingly beside the Tortoise. He can therefore just step over it, BAM, silly paradox destroyed. However far ahead the tortoise starts, this will always be the case. Unless you split silly hairs by saying that the person would get tired eventually yadda yadda yadda.The_root_of_all_evil said:Zeno's Paradox
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Beautifully concise and seemingly impenetrable.
You were close with the reason this doesn't work though. Eventually the gap between them becomes so small (You can get down to individual atoms if you like XD) that moving slightly further forward does indeed take the lead.
Another one I like; A restaurant owner is told he will receive a surprise inspection sometime next month. Next month is a 30-day month therefore if he has not received the inspection by the 29th, it must come on the 30th, which would mean it isn't a surprise. If it can't come on the 30th, and hasn't come by the 28th, then it must be on the 29th instead, which means it also wouldn't be a surprise. They can use this logic all the way down to the 1st and conclude they will not be receiving an inspection at all. Yet, as was told the inspection did come the next month, and it was a surprise because they were no longer expecting it.