Can you solve Einsteins Riddle Dan Van der Vieren

Before he turned physics upside down,

a young Albert Einstein supposedly
showed off his genius

by devising a complex riddle involving
this list of clues.

Can you resist tackling a brain teaser

written by one of the smartest
people in history?

Let’s give it a shot.

The world’s rarest fish has been
stolen from the city aquarium.

The police have followed the scent to a
street with five identical looking houses.

But they can’t search
all the houses at once,

and if they pick the wrong one,
the thief will know they’re on his trail.

It’s up to you, the city’s best detective,
to solve the case.

When you arrive on the scene,
the police tell you what they know.

One:

each house’s owner
is of a different nationality,

drinks a different beverage,

and smokes a different type of cigar.

Two:

each house’s interior walls
are painted a different color.

Three:

each house contains a different animal,
one of which is the fish.

After a few hours of expert sleuthing,
you gather some clues.

It may look like a lot of information,

but there’s a clear logical path
to the solution.

Solving the puzzle will be
a lot like Sudoku,

so you may find it helpful to organize
your information in a grid, like this.

Pause the video on the following screen to
examine your clues and solve the riddle.

Answer in: 3

2

1

To start, you fill in the information
from clues eight and nine.

Immediately, you also realize that since
the Norwegian is at the end of the street,

there’s only one house next to him,

which must be the one with the blue walls
in clue fourteen.

Clue five says the green-walled
house’s owner drinks coffee.

It can’t be the center house since you
already know its owner drinks milk,

but it also can’t be the second house,
which you know has blue walls.

And since clue four says

the green-walled house must be directly
to the left of the white-walled one,

it can’t be the first
or fifth house either.

The only place left
for the green-walled house

with the coffee drinker
is the fourth spot,

meaning the white-walled house
is the fifth.

Clue one gives you
a nationality and a color.

Since the only column missing both
these values is the center one,

this must be the Brit’s red-walled home.

Now that the only unassigned
wall color is yellow,

this must be applied to the first house,

where clue seven says
the Dunhill smoker lives.

And clue eleven tells you that
the owner of the horse is next door,

which can only be the second house.

The next step is to figure out what
the Norwegian in the first house drinks.

It can’t be tea, clue three tells you
that’s the Dane.

As per clue twelve, it can’t be root beer
since that person smokes Bluemaster,

and since you already
assigned milk and coffee,

it must be water.

From clue fifteen,

you know that the Norwegian’s neighbor,
who can only be in the second house,

smokes Blends.

Now that the only spot in the grid
without a cigar and a drink

is in the fifth column,

that must be the home of the person
in clue twelve.

And since this leaves only the second
house without a drink,

the tea-drinking Dane must live there.

The fourth house is now the only one
missing a nationality and a cigar brand,

so the Prince-smoking German
from clue thirteen must live there.

Through elimination, you can conclude
that the Brit smokes Pall Mall

and the Swede lives in the fifth house,

while clue six and clue two tell you

that these two have a bird
and a dog, respectively.

Clue ten tells you that the cat owner
lives next to the Blend-smoking Dane,

putting him in the first house.

Now with only one spot left on the grid,

you know that the German in the
green-walled house must be the culprit.

You and the police burst into the house,

catching the thief fish-handed.

While that explanation
was straightforward,

solving puzzles like this often
involves false starts and dead ends.

Part of the trick is to use
the process of elimination

and lots of trial and error
to hone in on the right pieces,

and the more logic puzzles you solve,

the better your intuition will be

for when and where there’s enough
information to make your deductions.

And did young Einstein
really write this puzzle?

Probably not.

There’s no evidence he did,

and some of the brands mentioned
are too recent.

But the logic here is not so different

from what you’d use to solve equations
with multiple variables,

even those describing
the nature of the universe.

在他颠覆物理学之前

,据说年轻的阿尔伯特爱因斯坦

通过设计一个涉及
这些线索列表的复杂谜语来展示他的天才。

你能抗拒解决历史

上最聪明的人之一写的脑筋急转弯
吗?

让我们试一试。

世界上最稀有的鱼
从城市水族馆被盗。

警方已经追踪到了
一条街道,那里有五栋外观一模一样的房子。

但他们不能
一次搜索所有的房子

,如果他们选错了
,小偷就会知道他们在跟踪他。

这取决于你,这个城市最好的侦探,
来解决这个案子。

当你到达现场时
,警察会告诉你他们所知道的。

一:

每个
房主的国籍不同,

喝的饮料不同

,抽的雪茄也不同。

二:

每间房子的内墙
都涂上不同的颜色。

三:

每个房子里都有不同的动物,
其中一种是鱼。

经过几个小时的专家侦查,
你收集了一些线索。

它可能看起来有很多信息,

但有一个明确
的解决方案逻辑路径。


谜很像数独,

因此您可能会发现
在网格中组织您的信息很有帮助,像这样。

暂停以下屏幕上的视频,
检查您的线索并解开谜题。

回答: 3

2

1

首先,您
从线索八和九中填写信息。

顿时,你也意识到,
既然挪威人在街的尽头,

那么他旁边就只有一所房子,

那肯定是第十四条蓝墙
的房子。

线索五说绿墙
房子的主人喝咖啡。

它不可能是中心房子,因为你
已经知道它的主人喝牛奶,

但它也不能是第二房子
,你知道它有蓝色的墙壁。

而且由于线索四

说绿墙房子必须直接
在白墙房子的左边,

它也不能是第一
或第五房子。

咖啡饮用者
的绿墙房子唯一剩下的地方

是第四个位置,

这意味着白墙房子
是第五个。

线索一为您
提供国籍和颜色。

由于唯一缺少这
两个值的列是中间那一列,

这一定是英国人的红墙住宅。

现在唯一未指定的
墙壁颜色是黄色,

这必须应用于第一个房子

,线索七
说登喜路吸烟者住在那里。

而线索十一告诉你,
马的主人就在隔壁

,只能是二楼。

下一步是弄清楚
第一屋的挪威人喝什么。

不可能是茶,线索三告诉你
那是丹麦人。

根据线索十二,
那人抽的是Bluemaster,不可能是根汁汽水

,既然你已经
分配了牛奶和咖啡,

那肯定是水。

从线索十五,

你知道挪威人的邻居
,只能在第二宫,

抽Blends。

既然网格中唯一
没有雪茄和饮料

的地方在第五列,

那一定是第十二条线索中的人的家

既然这样只剩下第二
所房子没有饮料

,喝茶的丹麦人必须住在那里。

第四家现在是唯一
缺少国籍和雪茄品牌的房子,

所以线索十三中的王子吸烟德国人
必须住在那里。

通过排除,你可以得出
结论,英国人抽 Pall Mall

和瑞典人住在第五宫,

而线索六和线索二告诉你

,这两个分别有一只鸟
和一只狗。

线索 10 告诉你,猫主人
住在抽混合烟的丹麦人旁边,

把他放在第一所房子里。

现在网格上只剩下一个位置,

你知道
绿墙房子里的德国人一定是罪魁祸首。

你和警察冲进房子,

抓住了小偷。

虽然这个解释
很简单,但

解决这样的谜题往往
涉及错误的开始和死胡同。

诀窍的一部分是
使用消除过程

和大量试验和错误
来磨练正确的部分

,你解决的逻辑谜题越多,

你的直觉就会越好

,因为有足够的信息可以在何时何
地进行推断 .

年轻的爱因斯坦
真的写出了这个谜题吗?

可能不是。

没有证据表明他做过,

而且提到的一些品牌
太新了。

但是这里的逻辑

与你用来求解
具有多个变量的方程的逻辑并没有太大的不同,

即使是那些描述
宇宙本质的方程。