Felton Riddle:

Your son Felton is a student in a class of 6 children. His classmates are Aaron, Bert, Chester, Diego, and Elmer.
Aaron is better than Chester.
Bert is better than exactly three others.
Chester is better than at least one other student.
Diego is better than everyone else.
Elmer is not better than Chester.
Felton is not better than Elmer.
Based only on these statements, how can you proudly say that your son is better than Diego?

You cannot, since

Diego is better than everyone else

I know the answer to this because i am the one who created this riddle.

To determine how to proudly say that your son, Felton, is better than Diego, we need to analyze the given statements and compare the abilities of each student.

Let's break down the given information:

1. Aaron is better than Chester.
2. Bert is better than exactly three others.
3. Chester is better than at least one other student.
4. Diego is better than everyone else.
5. Elmer is not better than Chester.
6. Felton is not better than Elmer.

Based on these statements, we can deduce the following:

1. Diego is the best among all the students.
2. Aaron is better than Chester, implying that Chester must be the weakest student.
3. Since Bert is better than exactly three others, one of those three must be Aaron, who is better than Chester. This means Bert is better than Chester as well.
4. Felton is not better than Elmer, but we don't have any direct comparisons with other students yet.

Considering these deductions, we can conclude that:
- Diego is the best, followed by Felton, Bert, Aaron, and Elmer.
- Chester is the weakest among the students.

Therefore, we can proudly say that your son, Felton, is better than Diego because he is ranked above Diego in the order of abilities.