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THE RUNES is a mysterious puzzle, containing 300 interlinked puzzles which gradually reveal an ancient mystery and give you the chance to solve it. The origin of the puzzle is a mystery in itself, but details of what is known and other information (including how to get your copy) can be found on THE RUNES website by clicking the red link at the top of this page.
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Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2007 10:34 pm Posts: 307 Location: Ipswich, Suffolk, England
The Babel puzzles become complicated later so it is really important to develop a robust method for solving these. I tend to start by assuming that the first statement is true and working through each statement marking them true or false and checking that this introduces no inconsistency. Upon finding that the initial assumption leads to inconsistency, I change that assumption and work though again. How do you do it?
Let me share my system, which is merely a slightly longer version of Gauntlet's.
I did everything on a spreadsheet, using letters instead of symbols for the characters. The great advantage here is that I could highlight a row with a colour (I used Green for True and Red for False) which meant that after a while I could register the status of a statement almost without thinking.
Otherwise I followed Gauntlet's method. I mark one statement with a 1 to show that's where I started, and colour it Green (assuming that it's true.) I then follow that statement through (colouring the other lines as I go) until either I hit an inconsistency (so I can clear all the colours!) or they are all Green/Red. If that happens, I then check down each statement in turn to make sure it still works, and if it does then I do it again just to be sure
One comment I will make is that always starting with the first statement isn't necessarily the best thing to do. Where there are several statements, sometimes it can pay you to check the whole set and see if there are two obviously contradictory ones (e.g. one person says the Doctor lies and another person says the Doctor tells the truth.) They can't both be right, and that's often a good place to start making your assumptions.
The method I tried on the most recent ToB (which seemed to work) was to write down the two main characters and the four possible outcomes
Dr ........ T...............T................F............F
Sch .......T...............F................T............F
and then add rows for the other characters and when a situation became impossible crossed that column out. A bit like a complicated alphactor, but simpler (I think)
Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2007 10:34 pm Posts: 307 Location: Ipswich, Suffolk, England
Scurra is quite right about not always starting with the first statement. Sometimes one can see self-referential statements that can only have one value. In those cases, they are a good place to start.
Joined: Sun Jul 22, 2007 11:53 am Posts: 126 Location: pretending to work
my method for these is the same as Gauntlet's - choose a statement, assume it's true, then go through the other statements until I either find an inconsistency or reach the end (at which point I check all the statements again and cheer)
I'm sure there are better ways of doing it, but I never did dig out my symbolic logic book and see what it recommended!
I'm totally in the dark here and would appreciate someone explaining how an answer is arrived at from the letter square with the symbols.
I'm probably just being totally thick or the general anesthetic I had last week has killed off my brain cells. (It's probably both)
Joined: Thu Jun 28, 2007 11:26 pm Posts: 117 Location: Bury St. Edmunds, England
Kathlyn,
I have some notes on how the this Tower of Babel puzzle works. There is also a write-up on a more complicated puzzle, together with a step by step solution.
If you would like to look at these, please send me a message and I will send you the link.
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