Two High-Stakes Gamblers Meet an Untimely Demise at a Drink-Off: A Lateral Thinking Puzzle
In a puzzling turn of events, two top poisons manufacturers, Smith and Jones, met their untimely demise in a seemingly straightforward ceremony. The Queen had asked them to bring a vial of their strongest poison to a drink-off where they would both take turns swigging from each other's containers and then their own before being watched for an hour.
The key to the puzzle lies in understanding that Smith and Jones, unaware of each other's poisons' strengths, were trying to outsmart the system. If one person brings a strong poison, it could potentially cure them if they ingest the weaker poison from the other. However, this came at the cost of their opponent's life.
Smith's strategy was to trick Jones into bringing a weaker poison by also bringing a weak vial, thereby increasing his chances of survival. Conversely, Jones had planned to do the same thing – bring a water-based potion in hopes that Smith wouldn't think of it either – assuming both would keep up appearances.
In this cleverly crafted trap, however, neither participant's plan succeeded. They all ended up dead from their own poison, rather than one single person living and the other dying as intended by the Queen.
This brain-twisting puzzle was created in the 1980s by Michael Rabin but recently resurfaced through mathematician Timothy Chow, highlighting its timeless appeal for those willing to challenge their problem-solving skills.
In a puzzling turn of events, two top poisons manufacturers, Smith and Jones, met their untimely demise in a seemingly straightforward ceremony. The Queen had asked them to bring a vial of their strongest poison to a drink-off where they would both take turns swigging from each other's containers and then their own before being watched for an hour.
The key to the puzzle lies in understanding that Smith and Jones, unaware of each other's poisons' strengths, were trying to outsmart the system. If one person brings a strong poison, it could potentially cure them if they ingest the weaker poison from the other. However, this came at the cost of their opponent's life.
Smith's strategy was to trick Jones into bringing a weaker poison by also bringing a weak vial, thereby increasing his chances of survival. Conversely, Jones had planned to do the same thing – bring a water-based potion in hopes that Smith wouldn't think of it either – assuming both would keep up appearances.
In this cleverly crafted trap, however, neither participant's plan succeeded. They all ended up dead from their own poison, rather than one single person living and the other dying as intended by the Queen.
This brain-twisting puzzle was created in the 1980s by Michael Rabin but recently resurfaced through mathematician Timothy Chow, highlighting its timeless appeal for those willing to challenge their problem-solving skills.