I feel like “technically false” would be more accurate. If it’s just you, the horse, and a puddle, it’s surely going to be at least difficult to convince it to start slurping it up if it doesn’t want to.
I feel like “technically false” would be more accurate. If it’s just you, the horse, and a puddle, it’s surely going to be at least difficult to convince it to start slurping it up if it doesn’t want to.
“You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink if you aren’t very imaginative and your resources are artificially limited”.
There is a sense of “drink” which encompasses raising a glass to your mouth and ingesting the liquid in it, or in the case of horses, lowering their head to the water, taking some into the mouth and swallowing it.
Sticking a tube down a horse’s throat certainly achieves something, but not precisely this.
I feel like “technically false” would be more accurate. If it’s just you, the horse, and a puddle, it’s surely going to be at least difficult to convince it to start slurping it up if it doesn’t want to.
“You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink if you aren’t very imaginative and your resources are artificially limited”.
If they’re sufficiently limited, you can’t even lead a horse to water.
There is a sense of “drink” which encompasses raising a glass to your mouth and ingesting the liquid in it, or in the case of horses, lowering their head to the water, taking some into the mouth and swallowing it.
Sticking a tube down a horse’s throat certainly achieves something, but not precisely this.
Presumably your goal is a hydrated horse, however.
Another example of the danger of explicit goal maximizers.
You could alo be trying to drug the horse or provide him with nutritional supplementation in liquid form.