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Jon is a baseball player. Score. ;)</p>
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Jon is a baseball player. Score. ;)</p>
<p>Jon is also a guy :)</p>
<p>Thank you for making my incredibly boring job mildly entertainig.</p>
<p>In baseball there is something called a ground rule double. this means that if the ball hits the ground and bounces over the fence the batter may not advance past second base. However, the ball is over the fence so all remaining players can score, just not the batter. However having that happen every other batter is highly unlikely.</p>
<p>This does not go toward the deductive reasoning it only explains how it could happen. A little help for those who do not watch baseball</p>
<p>This thread is an epic failure. Of the highest order. Complete failure. Speechless… failure…</p>
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<p>Runners can only advance two bases on a ground rule double. I believe there are occasional exceptions, but a runner on first will almost never score on a ground rule double.</p>
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<p>It can equal anything you want. Since the premises of your question are false, the truth of your conclusion has no bearing on the validity of the argument.</p>
<p>^^^^ It doesn’t say its a ground rule double anywhere.</p>
<p>Obviously a lot of you don’t watch baseball; it is definitely quite common for batters on first to score when someone hits a double (like hitting the ball down the line into the corner). You can run as many bases as you risk. Even though the person who hits the double may only get be able to make it to second base, the baserunner gets a head start and doesn’t need to worry about the batting part at all, so if he is fast enough and the double hit in the right spot, he can make it to home.</p>
<p>There isn’t anything to get.</p>