Farnam Street: The Simple Problem Einstein Couldn’t Solve … At First |
The Simple Problem Einstein Couldn’t Solve … At First Posted: 09 Jun 2014 05:00 AM PDT Albert Einstein and Max Wertheimer were close friends. Both found themselves in exile in the United States after fleeing the Nazis in the early 1930s, Einstein at Princeton and Wertheimer in New York. They communicated by exchanging letters in which Wertheimer would entertain Einstein with thought problems. In 1934 Wertheimer sent the following problem in a letter.
Wertheimer’s thought problem suggests the answer might be 45 or even 60 miles an hour. But that is not the case. Even if the car broke the sound barrier on the way down, it would not achieve an average speed of 30 miles an hour. Don’t be worried if you were fooled, Einstein was at first too. Replying "Not until calculating did I notice that there is no time left for the way down!" Gerd Gigerenzer explains the answer in his book Risk Savvy: How to Make Good Decisions:
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