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@LeehamsonThe3rd You should try to avoid forcibly casting because that silences type errors
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in my efforts to make my framedata system as modular as I can. I've found it wonderful adding these trigger tables which i can use to spawn different effects whilst an animation is playing! #robloxdev

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@plasma_node never in my life have I had to implement a binary tree
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@FrenzyyLumina @nekstoer @plasma_node There's another that's still being maintained:
github.com/Qquaded/Kinemi…
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You are being forced to press a button. You assume red is the default, and blue is a deviation. But it is not. You have to choose to press red. Red is an option the same as blue is. And there is no world where everyone picks red. And THAT is a problem. I reject the notion that it is simply dumb to press blue. Blue pushers have all manner of reason to press blue that isn’t logic based. Misunderstanding the premise, pressure, accidentally pressing it, etc etc. And I would say the key reason is to make sure everyone lives, which is baked into the premise. Because there is no world where everyone presses red.
The logic of the problem says that, in order for everyone to live, 50% or more of people have to press blue, or 100% of people have to press red. If even one person presses blue, they will die, and that is true until the count is above 50%.
So… I’m seeing a lot of “if everyone just pressed red” but not a lot of “if everyone just pressed blue.” It’s the same outcome. In fact, it’s more likely to save everyone, because having 50% or more of people push one of two buttons is absurdly more probable than every single person pressing the same one. It is nearly a sure thing not everyone will press red. So the next best way to save everyone is to press blue.
Like I said, it is fine to choose red. I do not judge any red pushers for wanting to know, absolutely, that you will live. But the logic of the scenario as worded, even in your red-skewed premise, has an incentive to press blue. Because we are human, and many of us feel an overwhelming urge to look out for one another, and trust that others feel the same.
That’s why the problem is so compelling. There is a mathematical logic to it, but it is not logical. If even one person presses blue, and I picked red, I would carry that with me forever. I would find ways to come to terms with it, but I would feel responsible. And that’s not exactly something you can logic away, it is only something you can deal with, or morally reframe in your mind, which you so elegantly did for yourself.
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