Changes

No change in size ,  13:25, 20 August 2009
Line 20: Line 20:  
'''Conundrums''' are problems of several types. They may be riddles with a pun for an answer. They may be puzzling problems that are complicated with intricate [[features]]. And they may be presented in the [[fashion]] of a rhetorical question, but with only conjecture for an answer.
 
'''Conundrums''' are problems of several types. They may be riddles with a pun for an answer. They may be puzzling problems that are complicated with intricate [[features]]. And they may be presented in the [[fashion]] of a rhetorical question, but with only conjecture for an answer.
   −
Conundrums create paralyzing [[paradoxe]]s or [[dilemma]]s. Psychologically, they are similar to approach-approach conflicts, such as a conflict known as Buridan’s ass, which was posed by fourteenth-century philosopher Jean Buridan. An ass forced to choose between two equally luscious piles of hay that are equidistant starves to death. This is similar to the Malthusian dilemma, which states that helping the poor (humanitarian) may be increasing starvation (inhuman) when food supplies grow arithmetically while population grows geometrically.
+
Conundrums create paralyzing [[paradox]]es or [[dilemma]]s. Psychologically, they are similar to approach-approach conflicts, such as a conflict known as Buridan’s ass, which was posed by fourteenth-century philosopher Jean Buridan. An ass forced to choose between two equally luscious piles of hay that are equidistant starves to death. This is similar to the Malthusian dilemma, which states that helping the poor (humanitarian) may be increasing starvation (inhuman) when food supplies grow arithmetically while population grows geometrically.
    
The word conundrum is often used cynically to describe a puzzle that will probably never be solved because of a lack of [[data]]. The word conundrum is also used to describe a paradoxically difficult problem, such as the problem faced by economists in the second half of the twentieth century of how to achieve full employment without inflation.
 
The word conundrum is often used cynically to describe a puzzle that will probably never be solved because of a lack of [[data]]. The word conundrum is also used to describe a paradoxically difficult problem, such as the problem faced by economists in the second half of the twentieth century of how to achieve full employment without inflation.