Can you solve the rebel supplies riddle Alex Gendler

You’re overseeing the delivery
of crucial supplies to a rebel base

deep in the heart of enemy territory.

To get past Imperial customs, all
packages must follow a strict protocol:

if a box is marked with
an even number on the bottom,

it must be sealed with a red top.

The boxes are already being loaded
onto the transport

when you receive an urgent message.

One of the four boxes
was sealed incorrectly,

but they lost track of which one.

All the boxes are still
on the conveyor belt.

Two are facing down:
one marked with a four,

and one with a seven.

The other two are facing up:

one with a black top,

another with a red one.

You know that any violation
of the protocol

will get the entire shipment confiscated
and put your allies in grave danger.

But any boxes you pull off for inspection
won’t make it onto this delivery run,

depriving the rebels
of critically needed supplies.

The transport leaves in a few moments,
with or without its cargo.

Which box or boxes should you
grab off the conveyor belt?

Pause the video now if you want
to figure it out for yourself!

Answer in: 3

Answer in: 2

Answer in: 1

It may seem like you need to inspect
all four boxes

to see what’s on the other side of each.

But in fact, only two of them matter.

Let’s look at the protocol again.

All it says is that even-numbered boxes
must have a red top.

It doesn’t say anything
about odd-numbered boxes,

so we can just ignore
the box marked with a seven.

What about the box with a red top?

Don’t we need to check
that the number on the bottom is even?

As it turns out, we don’t.

The protocol says that
if a box has an even number,

then it should have a red top.

It doesn’t say that only boxes
with even numbers can have red tops,

or that a box with a red top
must have an even number.

The requirement
only goes in one direction.

So we don’t need
to check the box with the red lid.

We do, however,
need to check the one with the black lid,

to make sure it wasn’t incorrectly
placed on an even-numbered box.

If you initially assumed the rules
imply a symmetrical match

between the number on the box
and the type of lid, you’re not alone.

That error is so common,
we even have a name for it:

affirming the consequent,

or the fallacy of the converse.

This fallacy wrongly assumes

that just because a certain condition
is necessary for a given result,

it must also be sufficient for it.

For instance, having an atmosphere
is a necessary condition

for being a habitable planet.

But this doesn’t mean that
it’s a sufficient condition –

planets like Venus have atmospheres
but lack other criteria for habitability.

If that still seems hard
to wrap your head around,

let’s look at
a slightly different problem.

Imagine the boxes contain groceries.

You see one marked for shipment
to a steakhouse

and one to a vegetarian restaurant.

Then you see two more boxes
turned upside down:

one labeled as containing meat,

and another as containing onions.

Which ones do you need to check?

Well, it’s easy –

make sure the meat isn’t being shipped
to the vegetarian restaurant,

and that the box going there
doesn’t contain meat.

The onions can go to either place,

and the box bound for the steakhouse
can contain either product.

Why does this scenario seem easier?

Formally, it’s the same problem –

two possible conditions
for the top of the box,

and two for the bottom.

But in this case, they’re based on
familiar real-world needs,

and we easily understand that
while vegetarians only eat vegetables,

they’re not the only ones who do so.

In the original problem,
the rules seemed more arbitrary,

and when they’re abstracted that way,

the logical connections
become harder to see.

In your case, you’ve managed
to get enough supplies through

to enable the resistance
to fight another day.

And you did it by thinking
outside the box –

both sides of it.

你正在监督向敌方领土中心深处
的叛军基地运送重要物资

为了通过帝国海关,所有
包裹都必须遵循严格的规定:

如果盒子底部标
有偶数,

则必须用红色顶部密封。 当您收到紧急消息时,

这些箱子已经被装载
到运输工具上

四个盒子中的一个
被错误地密封,

但他们不知道是哪一个。

所有的箱子都
还在传送带上。

两个朝下:
一个标有四,一个标

有七。

另外两个朝上:

一个是黑色的,

另一个是红色的。

您知道,任何
违反协议的行为

都会导致整批货物被没收
,并使您的盟友处于严重危险之中。

但是你拉下来检查的任何箱子
都不会进入这次交付运行,从而

剥夺了
叛军急需的物资。

运输工具会在几分钟内离开
,无论有没有货物。

您应该
从传送带上抓起哪个或多个盒子?

如果您
想自己解决问题,请立即暂停视频!

回答:3

回答:2

回答:1

似乎您需要检查
所有四个盒子

以查看每个盒子的另一侧是什么。

但实际上,只有其中两个重要。

让我们再看一下协议。

它只是说偶数的盒子
必须有一个红色的顶部。

它没有
说明奇数框,

所以我们可以忽略
标有七的框。

红顶的盒子呢?

我们不需要
检查底部的数字是否是偶数吗?

事实证明,我们没有。

该协议规定,
如果一个盒子有一个偶数,

那么它应该有一个红色的顶部。

这并不是说
只有偶数的盒子才能有红顶,或者红顶

的盒子
必须有偶数。

要求
只向一个方向发展。

所以我们
不需要勾选带有红色盖子的框。

但是,我们确实
需要检查带有黑色盖子的那个,

以确保它没有被错误地
放置在偶数编号的盒子上。

如果您最初认为规则
意味着

盒子上的数字
和盖子类型之间的对称匹配,那么您并不孤单。

这个错误是如此普遍,
我们甚至给它起了个名字:

肯定结果,

或逆向谬误。

这个谬误错误地假设

,仅仅因为某个条件
对于给定结果是必要的,

它也必须是充分的。

例如,拥有大气层

是成为宜居星球的必要条件。

但这并不意味着
它是一个充分条件——

像金星这样的行星有大气层,
但缺乏其他宜居性标准。

如果这似乎仍然
难以理解,

让我们看
一个稍微不同的问题。

想象一下盒子里装着杂货。

您会看到一个标记为运送
到牛排馆

,一个标记为运送到素食餐厅。

然后你看到另外两个盒子
倒置了:

一个标有肉

,另一个标有洋葱。

您需要检查哪些?

嗯,这很简单——

确保肉没有被运
到素食餐厅,

而且去那里的盒子里
没有肉。

洋葱可以去任何一个地方,

去牛排馆的盒子
可以装任何一种产品。

为什么这个场景看起来更容易?

从形式上讲,这是同一个问题——

盒子顶部

有两种可能的情况,底部有两种。

但在这种情况下,它们是基于
熟悉的现实世界需求

,我们很容易理解,
虽然素食者只吃蔬菜,

但他们并不是唯一这样做的人。

在最初的问题中
,规则似乎更加随意

,当它们以这种方式抽象时

,逻辑联系
变得更难看到。

在你的情况下,你已经
设法获得足够的补给

,使抵抗组织
能够再战一天。

你是通过跳出框框思考来做到这一点的
——

它的两面。