Background of my question is Martin Gardner's "unexpected hanging" paradoxon, which has once again be the subject of an article in a popular-scientific magazin (this time because this year it has been 5 years since Martin Gardner passed away on May 22nd).
The essence of the paradox is whether it is possible to predict that an event will come unexpectedly, despite an inductive proof that that isn't possible.
What I would like to know is, what the mathematical interpretation of "expected/unexpected" is in the context of the paradoxon; specifically whether it is related to probability measures.