Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
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- Erabareshi Kodomotachi
Posts: 1291
Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
haha, here are two Lateral Thinking problems, really hard, not kidding, REALLY HARD.
Let's see...
Lateral Thinking VI
Of three men, one always tells the truth, one always tells lies, and one answers "yes" or "no" randomly. Each man knows which one each of the others are. You may ask three yes/no questions, each of which may only be answered by one of the three men, after which you must be able to identify which man is which. How can you do it?
Lateral Thinking VII
You and your spouse invite four other couples to a party. During the course of the conversation, it is discovered that, prior to the party, each person except you was acquainted with a different number of the people present. Assuming the acquaintance relationship is symmetric (i.e., if you are acquainted with someone, that person is also acquainted with you), then how many people did your spouse know prior to the party? How many people did you know?
Good Luck! However, I'm sure you can get it.
Let's see...
Lateral Thinking VI
Of three men, one always tells the truth, one always tells lies, and one answers "yes" or "no" randomly. Each man knows which one each of the others are. You may ask three yes/no questions, each of which may only be answered by one of the three men, after which you must be able to identify which man is which. How can you do it?
Lateral Thinking VII
You and your spouse invite four other couples to a party. During the course of the conversation, it is discovered that, prior to the party, each person except you was acquainted with a different number of the people present. Assuming the acquaintance relationship is symmetric (i.e., if you are acquainted with someone, that person is also acquainted with you), then how many people did your spouse know prior to the party? How many people did you know?
Good Luck! However, I'm sure you can get it.
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- I'm bluek's pet cat <3
Posts: 1165
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
OMG this is way to difficult.... 
Oh well.... SAYUMI!!! GET HERE!!! NOOOOW!!!
Just kidding.

Oh well.... SAYUMI!!! GET HERE!!! NOOOOW!!!
Just kidding.

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- Everyone a Critic
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Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Number 7Holmes wrote: haha, here are two Lateral Thinking problems, really hard, not kidding, REALLY HARD.
Let's see...
Lateral Thinking VI
Of three men, one always tells the truth, one always tells lies, and one answers "yes" or "no" randomly. Each man knows which one each of the others are. You may ask three yes/no questions, each of which may only be answered by one of the three men, after which you must be able to identify which man is which. How can you do it?
Lateral Thinking VII
You and your spouse invite four other couples to a party. During the course of the conversation, it is discovered that, prior to the party, each person except you was acquainted with a different number of the people present. Assuming the acquaintance relationship is symmetric (i.e., if you are acquainted with someone, that person is also acquainted with you), then how many people did your spouse know prior to the party? How many people did you know?
Good Luck! However, I'm sure you can get it.
Spoiler:
Later
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- Erabareshi Kodomotachi
Posts: 1291
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Good start sstimson, but be careful, numbre 7 is tricky in a way.
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- 安心ã
Posts: 95
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Let me do VII first. I found two approaches.Holmes wrote:
Lateral Thinking VII
You and your spouse invite four other couples to a party. During the course of the conversation, it is discovered that, prior to the party, each person except you was acquainted with a different number of the people present. Assuming the acquaintance relationship is symmetric (i.e., if you are acquainted with someone, that person is also acquainted with you), then how many people did your spouse know prior to the party? How many people did you know?
Good Luck! However, I'm sure you can get it.
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
Last edited by ayw on February 22nd, 2009, 11:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
Move, and the way will open.
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- shinjitsu wa itsumo hitotsu
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Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Why not just permute the problem? Use permutation to solve the number of acquaintances? I'm too lazy to do it right now... XDDD kidding 

thanks DCTP!!! ♥♥♥


thanks very much ShinRan36!!!! ♥♥♥ *mwah*




thanks very much ShinRan36!!!! ♥♥♥ *mwah*
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- 安心ã
Posts: 95
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
>>sstimson
>>kat1214
You cannot assume that your spouse knows at minimum 5, since it may have been you who invited all the other couples. You might impose the condition that the combined number of acquaintances between you and your spouse must be at least 5, but this condition is not needed to solve this problem.sstimson wrote: Number 7LaterSpoiler:
>>kat1214
If you try all permutations you will see that every permutation leads to the same result. The permutations are degenerate because when we label everyone with e.g. letters, and assign the acquaintance status between two labels, we don't really care which label corresponds to how many acquaintances the person with that label has, as long as, in the end, each person except you has a different number (1... 9) of acquaintances.kat1214young wrote: Why not just permute the problem? Use permutation to solve the number of acquaintances? I'm too lazy to do it right now... XDDD kidding![]()
Move, and the way will open.
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- Erabareshi Kodomotachi
Posts: 1291
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
ayw, you don´t stop amzing me, your answer with the table explains the problem briefly, but concrete, it can be understood very well, good job! 
Now, let´s see if Lateral Thinking VI can be resolved (), I like this one, because it´s not the traditional " a man always tells lies and the other the truth".

Now, let´s see if Lateral Thinking VI can be resolved (
Spoiler:
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Posts: 124
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
I'll work on VI on Wednesday
btw good job ayw- let me guess- your good at maths???
btw good job ayw- let me guess- your good at maths???
"It is one of those instances where the reasoner can produce an effect which seems remarkable to his neighbor, because the latter has missed the one little point which is the basis of the deduction."
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes
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- 安心ã
Posts: 95
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
@Holmes & Sayumi, thanks
yes, i like maths a lot; in fact it's essential in my work. That's why I found VII a bit easier than VI, though they're both fiendishly hard - as Holmes had warned.
I think I cracked VI now too - It took me the best part of the day, during which I should have been working!
. Below are the questions that should do the trick. But I won't reveal the reasoning yet.
Holmes, these two problems are really great! Thanks so much again! I'll test my fellow astronomers with them
Here we go - I hope I got this right:
Definitions:
Q1.
Q2.
Q3.
These questions are probably not a unique solution. There may be other ones one could use, though I wonder if they are fundamentally different. Even just having the questions above, it may be fun to figure out how to determine what types A, B, and C are.

I think I cracked VI now too - It took me the best part of the day, during which I should have been working!

Holmes, these two problems are really great! Thanks so much again! I'll test my fellow astronomers with them

Here we go - I hope I got this right:
Definitions:
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
Move, and the way will open.
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- 安心ã
Posts: 95
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
The reasoning to the above solution
Spoiler:
Last edited by ayw on February 25th, 2009, 6:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
Move, and the way will open.
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Posts: 49
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
I'm sorry... But I cant get how will the questions of ayw know who is who..
Because if I answered it...This is what i got..
1. If yes(A is T,L,M) No(A is T,L,M)
2 (If 1 is "yes") If Yes(C is T,M) If No(C is L,M)
(If 1 is "no") If Yes(B is L,M) If No(B is T,M)
3 If Yes(A is T,L,M) No(A is T,L,M)
List of Combinations..
A. A is T,L,M; C is T,M; B is T,L,M
B. A is T,L,M; C is L,M; B is T,L,M
C. A is T,L,M; B is L,M; C is T,L,M
D. A is T,L,M; B is T,M; C is T,L,M
Sorry...But I still cant get it even with the reasoning of ayw
Can someone explain how will it work? thx ^^
Because if I answered it...This is what i got..
1. If yes(A is T,L,M) No(A is T,L,M)
2 (If 1 is "yes") If Yes(C is T,M) If No(C is L,M)
(If 1 is "no") If Yes(B is L,M) If No(B is T,M)
3 If Yes(A is T,L,M) No(A is T,L,M)
List of Combinations..
A. A is T,L,M; C is T,M; B is T,L,M
B. A is T,L,M; C is L,M; B is T,L,M
C. A is T,L,M; B is L,M; C is T,L,M
D. A is T,L,M; B is T,M; C is T,L,M
Sorry...But I still cant get it even with the reasoning of ayw
Can someone explain how will it work? thx ^^
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Posts: 124
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Okay, as promised I did LT VI today (it actually got me through all of politics and half of maths on my way to the bus stop I finally got an idea for the last step and tried it out while I was sitting in the bus-I think the guy sittung next to me thought I was weird-being so enthusiastic about maths
) Anyway, I really liked this one, it's definitely my favorite LT out of the ones I've done.
It's a bit different from ayw's one but the general idea is similar
I haven't actually read ayw's full answer yet- I'll do that now. I just really wanted to post this 
EDIT: Okay I just read ayw's answer and we've actually got the same one (seems to happen a lot 8) ) except for having slightly different questions for 2 and 3. The long explantion (okay it wasn't really long) with lots of colorful ABCLTMs confused me for a minute into thinking it was anotherway of solving this.

It's a bit different from ayw's one but the general idea is similar
Spoiler:

EDIT: Okay I just read ayw's answer and we've actually got the same one (seems to happen a lot 8) ) except for having slightly different questions for 2 and 3. The long explantion (okay it wasn't really long) with lots of colorful ABCLTMs confused me for a minute into thinking it was anotherway of solving this.
Last edited by Sayumi on February 25th, 2009, 8:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
"It is one of those instances where the reasoner can produce an effect which seems remarkable to his neighbor, because the latter has missed the one little point which is the basis of the deduction."
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes
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- Erabareshi Kodomotachi
Posts: 1291
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
I read all the answers and I think they are very good reasonings and are ok.
Here is the "correct" answer of the problem:
Here is the "correct" answer of the problem:
Spoiler:
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- 安心ã
Posts: 95
Re: Lateral Thinking VI and VII (very difficult)
Sayumi's answer, mine, and Holmes' "correct" one are essentially the same, though Sayumi's explanation is clearest. Yeah, the colours in my post don't really help 
@S. H. It is not important what A might be after the first question, but that the next question goes to someone who is either T or L.
A will either say the truth or lie. For the moment it's not important what type A is. Ask the first question and if the answer is...
yes and A said the truth then (C is L)
yes and A lied then (C is T)
no and A said the truth then (B is L)
no and A lied then (B is T)
So, if the answer is yes, then ask the next question to C. If it is no then ask the next question to B. In either case, you will ask the next question to someone who is either T or L, and you can easily determine with one question which (e.g. "Is 1+1=2?")

@S. H. It is not important what A might be after the first question, but that the next question goes to someone who is either T or L.
A will either say the truth or lie. For the moment it's not important what type A is. Ask the first question and if the answer is...
yes and A said the truth then (C is L)
yes and A lied then (C is T)
no and A said the truth then (B is L)
no and A lied then (B is T)
So, if the answer is yes, then ask the next question to C. If it is no then ask the next question to B. In either case, you will ask the next question to someone who is either T or L, and you can easily determine with one question which (e.g. "Is 1+1=2?")
Move, and the way will open.