Can a monkey outrun a bullet and still save her litter?

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The discussion revolves around a series of tricky questions and riddles shared among participants. Key questions include the amount of soil in a hole, the safest room for a condemned murderer, and a math challenge involving sequential additions. Participants engage in solving these riddles, offering various answers and reasoning, with some humor and banter included. The thread showcases a mix of logical puzzles and lateral thinking challenges, encouraging creative problem-solving among the members.
  • #151


K.J.Healey said:
is that a safe site? might want to check your adaware.
I don't get a warning when I go there. Perhaps because I am running Mozilla on Linux. I am going to report myself just in case and have the admins remove the link from my post and from yours as well.
 
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  • #152


jimmysnyder said:
Is that the definition of knee and elbow? I thought a knee was the joint in the leg between the femur on one side and the tibia and fibula on the other. And the elbow, the joint between the humerus on the one side and the ulna and radius on the other. That's how it is on me and my kids.

Since this is brainteasers, one might be expected to stretch definitions to get an answer, but for the sake of correctness, yes, the knee is the joint between the femur and tibia (the fibula really isn't contacting the joint directly, but most assume so since it's very close), and the elbow is the joint between the humerus and ulna and radius. While the humerus and femur are similar in appearance (you can distinguish them by details and size, but an untrained eye could easily confuse them), the tibia and ulna are much more distinct in shape.

Again, people also do often confuse the ankles and wrists of quadripeds with knees because of their location, but this is not unique to any single quadriped, so I don't think it would be sufficient to solve the question.
 
  • #153


verty said:
Q: A man is in a room with no windows, no door, no holes in the ceiling and no trapdoors in the floor. How does he escape the room?

When I have heard this previously, it included the addition of a stool or other piece of furniture, such as a chair.

If not, the same answer can be arrived at assuming the man is wearing clothes. In which case, he tears his shirt in half.

He then has two halves.

What do two halves make?

An alternative answer, assuming the presence of a stool, would be to break off one of the legs of the stool, and then "knock himself out".

Perhaps one could do this with his fists as well :)
 
  • #154


Q: A man is in a room with no windows, no door, no holes in the ceiling and no trapdoors in the floor. How does he escape the room?

If he was a mathematician he could define himself to be on the outside.

As far as the bread thing goes, you get 0 slices. When you make the first cut, the bread is not whole anymore.

k
 
  • #155


kenewbie said:
Q: A man is in a room with no windows, no door, no holes in the ceiling and no trapdoors in the floor. How does he escape the room?

If he was a mathematician he could define himself to be on the outside.

As far as the bread thing goes, you get 0 slices. When you make the first cut, the bread is not whole anymore.

k
Yes, but you're now holding one slice.

The answer is 1.
 
  • #156


powergirl said:
Let me ask the Ist Quest:'n.
"1) How much soil is there in a hole measuring one metre by one metre by one metre?"

if it is a hole it contains nothing, it could potentially hold the exact quantity that was removed.
 
  • #157


powergirl said:
:::>A man dressed all in black is walking down a country lane. Suddenly a large black car without any lights on comes round the corner and screeches to a halt.

How did the driver know there was a man in the road?

either it was day time or he stopped after running him down
 
  • #158


throng said:
if it is a hole it contains nothing, it could potentially hold the exact quantity that was removed.
Well, you know the answer but you've over-thought it.

The question is 'how much soil is there in the hole?'. To which the answer, of course, is 'none'.
 
  • #159


DaveC426913 said:
Yes, but you're now holding one slice.

The answer is 1.

Yeah, you are right. The question asked for "slices of 1.5 cm each", and I figured you start by cutting the bread in equal halfs for some reason. Of course, if you make the first cut 1.5 cm from one end, you get a slice of the correct width.

Oh, no wait. I guess one could argue that once you penetrate the crust of the bread, it is not whole anymore, and thus the first slice does not count either :)

k
 
  • #160


kenewbie said:
Oh, no wait. I guess one could argue that once you penetrate the crust of the bread, it is not whole anymore, and thus the first slice does not count either :)
No. An object with a cut in it is still a single object. The whole is not divided until there is more than one piece.
 
  • #161


Maybe I don't get this but haven't all the questions here already been answered around page 4 or 5? So why do people keep posting the same answer? << You could see that as a sociological tricky question, although I'm afraid I don't have an answer for it.
 
  • #162


xtd said:
Maybe I don't get this but haven't all the questions here already been answered around page 4 or 5? So why do people keep posting the same answer? << You could see that as a sociological tricky question, although I'm afraid I don't have an answer for it.
To some, the actual answer is less interesting than the logic by which you arrived at it.

There's some joke somewhere about a mathematician who saw a chair or something on fire, but, having spied the bucket of water next to it, did not use it to put the fire out. His logic was that, since he'd solved the problem logically, physically demonstrating the solution was redundant.

...or something like that...

:biggrin:
 
  • #163


powergirl said:
NOt right;
Can anyone answer this?
2) A murderer is condemned to death. He has to choose between three rooms: The first is full of raging fires, the second is full of assassins with loaded guns, and the third is full of lions that haven't eaten in 3 years. Which room is safest for him?

THE ANSWER IS:

The third room because lions can't live three years without eating anything... so i might be dead so its safe...:cool:
 
  • #164


zidiane said:
truth guy;which door are you gaurding? "the one behind me."
liar guy;which door are you gaurding? "the one behind that guy right there"

Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you asked the guards that question then these could also be outcomes:

1) You ask the guard that only speaks the truth which door his is guarding. The guard will reply, "The door to freedom," or an equally useless answer.
2) You ask the guard that only speaks lies. The guard will reply, "The door to freedom," or something similar.

Is it just me or am I finding a flaw in the logic here?
 
  • #165


powergirl said:
A prisoner is in jail. There are two doors, one leads to freedom one leads to death. There is a guard at each door. One guard always tells the truth, the other always tells lies. The prisoner is allowed one question to either of the guards.
What is the question that will take him to freedom.?

he would ask either one (it doesn't matter which) what door the other gaurd would say. the gaurd would answer and then he would choose the oposite of what the answer to the question was... this would work because let's say guard A tells the truth and gaurd B lies. if he asked guard A what guard B would say, then Guard A would be telling the truth about the other lieing about which one leads to freedom. so let's say door P led to freedom and door Q led to death. Guard A would say that guard B would say that door Q leads to freedom. so he would take door P
if he asked guard B what guard A would say then guard B would be lieing about guard A elling the truth, and would say that guard A would say that door Q leads to freedom, even though guard A wouldn't say that.
either way he would take door P to freedom

btw... I am only 13 ^.^
 
  • #166


can you guys answer this question?

what appears once in a minute, twice in a week, and once in a year?
 
  • #167


~*Tear*~ said:
can you guys answer this question?

what appears once in a minute, twice in a week, and once in a year?
And four times in "a jolly good fellow"
e
 
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  • #168


a bus conductor accidentally knocked down and killed 50 people while driving his bus in a drunken state.
The judge then sentenced him to death penalty by the electric chair.

On his execution date, he requested to have bananas before he died, and so the judge passed him a bundle of fresh bananas. Surprisingly the electric chair did not kill him.

So the next day, he was tried for execution again, and the same, he requested an apple, so the judge gave him a ripe apple. Amazingly, he survived.

Finally, the judge let him go.

Question: how did he survive?
 
  • #169


unscientific said:
a bus conductor accidentally knocked down and killed 50 people while driving his bus in a drunken state.
The judge then sentenced him to death penalty by the electric chair.

On his execution date, he requested to have bananas before he died, and so the judge passed him a bundle of fresh bananas. Surprisingly the electric chair did not kill him.

So the next day, he was tried for execution again, and the same, he requested an apple, so the judge gave him a ripe apple. Amazingly, he survived.

Finally, the judge let him go.

Question: how did he survive?

"the judge passed him a bundle of fresh bananas. Surprisingly the electric chair did not kill him."
"the judge gave him a ripe apple. Amazingly, he survived."

Because handling fruit is not lethal to judges.
 
  • #170


wrong answer.
 
  • #171


What is it?

The manufacturer doesn't want it, the buyer doesn't use it and the user doesn't see it.
 
  • #172


coffin
 
  • #173


Art said:
What is it?

The manufacturer doesn't want it, the buyer doesn't use it and the user doesn't see it.

"fiscal stimuli"
 
  • #174


There's no user, though.
 
  • #175


unscientific said:
a bus conductor accidentally knocked down and killed 50 people while driving his bus in a drunken state.
The judge then sentenced him to death penalty by the electric chair.

On his execution date, he requested to have bananas before he died, and so the judge passed him a bundle of fresh bananas. Surprisingly the electric chair did not kill him.

So the next day, he was tried for execution again, and the same, he requested an apple, so the judge gave him a ripe apple. Amazingly, he survived.

Finally, the judge let him go.

Question: how did he survive?
Need a hint.
My first suspicion is that the bananas and apple are red herrings.
 
  • #176


unscientific said:
a bus conductor accidentally knocked down and killed 50 people while driving his bus in a drunken state.
The judge then sentenced him to death penalty by the electric chair.

On his execution date, he requested to have bananas before he died, and so the judge passed him a bundle of fresh bananas. Surprisingly the electric chair did not kill him.

So the next day, he was tried for execution again, and the same, he requested an apple, so the judge gave him a ripe apple. Amazingly, he survived.

Finally, the judge let him go.

Question: how did he survive?

My attempt:

I'm confused because it says "tried for execution" in the third paragraph, but says it was his "execution date" in the second paragraph. Is he being tried or executed?

The electric chair can't kill him if he's not sitting in it...
 
  • #177


Need a hint.
My first suspicion is that the bananas and apple are red herrings.
Correct - Hint
What kind of conductor was he?


edit - damn now I'm hooked on this thread, as if the famous landmark one isn't bad enough.
 
  • #178


mgb_phys said:
Correct - Hint
What kind of conductor was he?

Wow, that's awful. It's not really a brain teaser, it's just a bad pun.

DaveE
 
  • #179


Pythagorean said:
My attempt:

Well, I thought you might be onto something for a second.

At first I thought 'it doesn't actually say he was convicted, or that he's going to the chair anytime soon, so it's not surprising he;s still alive (why wouldn't he be?)'

Except it does say 'on his execution date', which means he was, in fact, supposed to be executed on the first day and it didn't happen for some reason.
 
  • #180


I got a brilliant few puzzles here:

Hint: All the questions only have one solution.

1: I have a number that is less than one million. Putting a 1 after it makes it three times as large as putting a 1 before it. What is my number?

2: If Adam and Ben worked together to paint a house they would take 12 hours. Adam and Colin as a team would take 15 hours to paint the house and Ben and Colin as a pair would take 20 hours.
Assuming that the rate at which each painter works is not affected by whom he works with, how long would it take to paint the house if they all worked together?

3: Given any three-digit number, x, define f(x) to be
x minus the sum of the squares of the digits of x
What is the maximum possible value of f(x)?

4. A king has some (finite) number of subjects. One day he lines them all up in a row, facing towards the front of the row. He goes from the front of the row to the back, giving each subject a hat - either red or blue.

No subject can see his/her own hat, nor can any subject see behind himself/herself. But a subject can see ALL of the others that come before him/her in line.

So the king has made his way to the back of the line, and now he will ask the person at the back of the line "What color is your hat?" while brandishing a big sword. If answered correctly, the person is freed. If answered incorrectly, the person is beheaded immediately. No communication between subjects is allowed, although they can hear each others' guesses.

You have a chance to meet with the subjects ahead of time - the night before this incident - to give them a strategy that will save the most number of lives (guaranteed, not a probability or expected outcome).
 
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