How to use “Legit Riddles” as Brain Training Exercises
What make a riddle/puzzle/brain-teaser “legit”?
In order for a riddle to be useful for this exercise it needs to depend on a faulty assumption, unconscious bias or a “Cognitive Blind Spot”. The answer needs to be both obvious and evident from the information contained in the riddle itself. It also needs to have only ONE answer that fits the facts or evidence contained in the riddle.
There are “jokes” that masquerade as “riddles” … these are not as helpful in developing or training this skill.
“What has 4-wheels and flies” (A garbage truck)
It’s clever, a bit witty, and pretty funny (if your 10 years old… or a little high) but it’s not a “legit” riddle because FIRST, there are simply too may possible responses that are correct.
Various aircraft, helicopters, X-Game Skaters, landfills, Dead-Baby on a Skateboard… etc…
SECOND, each alternative response has equally sound reasoning from various levels of depth, complexity or perspective.
While these types of riddles have utility (how many rational responses with sound reasoning can you come up with) they’re not a very good way to practice the type of critical thinking skills that have practical utility. There are few questions or problems that have multiple answers that are of equal validity, efficacy or utility.
The brain is like any other muscle, you need to use the proper form with the appropriate exercise to reach the desired goal.
How to use riddles to train your brain for better Critical Thinking
1) Read/Listen to Riddle once
Try to pay close attention, it’s a learned skill, so you may miss some of the details the first time but TRY to complete exercise with only ONE read or listen. Over time you will get better at picking up on small details quickly, but only if you practice the correct form.
2) Write down answer to riddle
Write out your response based on your first read/listen. It’s helpful to try and write your response in a complete sentence. As we’ve discussed, written communication can improve oral communication. An idea needs to be fully formed in order to write it out in a complete sentence, the better you get at writing out a complete thought the better you’ll get at FORMING a complete thought. As you improve your writing, you’ll improve your speaking and you’ll become a better communicator.
3) Explain WHY your answer makes sense (Explain your reasoning)
At this point you’re likely to identify an error, especially when you start to practice this process, you may have a good “IDEA” but it may not stand up to scrutiny, and that’s the point of this exercise, to develop the ability to assess your own thinking and scrutinize your own reasoning.
IF (when) you identify an error in reasoning it’s important to NOT destroy your original thought… often, an error will turn out to have a grain of truth to it. You also don’t want to repeat mistakes. It’s useful to have access to your earlier attempts to mine useful bits of reasoning or perspectives.
This is where you might read the riddle for the second time to help explain your reasoning. In time you will combine your answer and explanation in a single paragraph.
“The reason the man can only ride the elevator to the 10th floor is because he’s a dwarf and cannot reach the button for the 14th floor. If someone is in the elevator with him, he can ask them to hit the button for him, and if it’s raining, he can use his umbrella.”
4) Discover the “Correct” answer
Don’t check the answer before making 2-3 honest attempts at an answer on your own. The exercise is what’s important, explaining why a guess doesn’t work is as important as figuring out what DOES work.
It’s also important to examine your reasoning even if you’ve figured out the correct answer. It’s possible to have the right answer with the wrong reasoning… and that’s dangerous. If you get lucky and come to the correct answer with faulty reasoning it will make it more difficult to work through a wrong answer later. If you think your reasoning is sound, you’re more likely to try and convince yourself that a wrong answer is right… you can create a permeant blind spot in your thinking if you’re not careful.
5) Reflect on your answer
Assess any errors in reasoning that caused you to reach a faulty conclusion or any aspect of your response that may have missed an element in the question that was important to seeing the solution. The key to a good riddle is the incorporation of a trigger that will cause an error in reasoning, unconscious bias or cognitive blind spot. Assessing your reasoning to uncover these common errors is essential to becoming a better critical thinker, asymmetrical problem solver and developing the non-linear thinking skills that are at the heart of innovation and the kind of creative destruction and paradigm shifting that modern life requires.
6) Write down your error in reasoning and the trigger that caused the “Cognitive Blind Spot”
As previously discussed, having the thought in your head doesn’t mean you’re able to articulate it. In order to articulate an idea, it must be fully formed and clearly understood. Writing it out forces you to complete its formation, clarify it and make it more comprehensible. Also, it gives you a written record to track your growth, see your improvement and provide you with a wealth of information to reflect on and mine as your perceptive abilities improve and perspective shifts over time.
We’ve already explored “Reflection” in “Data Processing” (Unit 3c). The development of “Meta-Reflection” (reflecting on earlier reflections) will become valuable later. As previously discussed, the GateWay Method is about building capacity through exercises and activities that stack together to create new skills, strategies and tools. Each element must be properly constructed in order for the total system to function properly.
As always: Do what I tell you to do, the way I tell you to do it, and give me an honest effort and I guarantee results. You may not fully understand how all the pieces fit together, but they do, just concentrate on waxing the car, sanding the floor and painting the fence, the rest will take care of itself.
From “What Am I” by Zack Guido (A Collection of Traditional Word Riddles)