and for the other version of the riddle consider that dragon A is evaluating the possible perspective of the other dragons, so they draw up a chart.
Quote:
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| ############# | Dragon B's Perspective | Dragon C's Perspective | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon A's Eye Color | Green or Red | Green or Red | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon B's Eye Color | Green or Red | Green | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon C's Eye Color | Green | Green or Red | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
note that dragon B and Dragon C, in reality, knows that dragon A has green eyes, but Dragon A doesn't know which of these the other dragon knows, and so when making their chart they can't put down either green or red in that cell.
Now dragon A imagines that dragon B is making a similar chart. It would look something like this:
Quote:
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| ############# | Dragon A's Perspective | Dragon C's Perspective | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon A's Eye Color | Green or Red | Green or Red | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon B's Eye Color | Green or Red | Green or Red | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
| Dragon C's Eye Color | Green | Green or Red | | |
+----------------------+------------------------+------------------------+--+--+
Dragon B does not know their own eye colour, so they do not know what dragon C sees them as. The rest of the logic remains the same.
In this analysis, it is thus possible for Dragon A to believe that Dragon B believes that Dragon C believes that all dragons have red eyes. This is one hefty sentence so I'll break it up a bit logically.
-Dragon A begins with the assumption that it has red eyes (which is possible from its perspective).
-Dragon A then begins thinking about what Dragon B sees. Dragon B will see that Dragon A has red eyes and that Dragon C has green eyes.
-Dragon A then begins thinking about what Dragon B thinks about Dragon C's perspective.
-Dragon A posits that Dragon B makes the assumption that it has red eyes. (which is possible from dragon B's perspective)
-Dragon A posits that Dragon B then imagines that dragon C sees two dragons with red eyes, and does not know its own eye colour
-Dragon A posits that Dragon B then posits that dragon C can believe that all three dragons have red eyes
Thus, from Dragon A's perspective, it is possible that Dragon B's analysis of the situation could result in the possibility of dragon C believing all dragons could possibly have red eyes.
When all dragons learn that there is at least one dragon has green eyes, this possibility obviously collapses, and so Dragon A's analysis of the situation changes.