{"items": [{"author": "Wayne", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/617330198212?comment_id=617330757092", "anchor": "fb-617330757092", "service": "fb", "text": "", "timestamp": "1371857399"}, {"author": "Ben", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/617330198212?comment_id=617331011582", "anchor": "fb-617331011582", "service": "fb", "text": "I like that a lot. I tend to resist those sorts of hypotheticals, and while part of that resistance is probably just anxiety about finding myself defending a view I'm not proud of, part of it might be a rejection of the \"perfect information\" assumption you describe.", "timestamp": "1371857659"}, {"author": "Arthur", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/617330198212?comment_id=617351929662", "anchor": "fb-617351929662", "service": "fb", "text": "A lot of \"paradoxical\" intuitive rejection of logical truths in such hypotheticals is due to the hypothetical demanding you be certain of something that in a real situation no one would ever be certain of. (This applies to basically all of such paradoxes that involve some kind of gambling game with an absurdly high monetary payoff, like the St. Petersburg paradox.)", "timestamp": "1371872539"}]}