Do you have a big brain, a pen and paper, and an hour to kill? Try this self-referential logic test! People who succeed gain automatic admission to MENSA.
Many scientists consider humans to be apes, because they classify humans as animals. Those that believe in the creation account in the Bible believe that humans are set apart from the animals, and therefore are not animals nor apes. So, while I got the question right, because I was able to pick up on the "trick", I don't agree with it. Scientists classify humans as animals because it is yet another way they can make known their disdain for the idea of God and creation. For others, it is simply the only conclusion they come to because they refuse to believe in a creator. Putting it on the quiz like this as a trick question seems intentional as a jab toward Christians. Hopefully that wasn't the intention, but it comes across that way.
@ctleng76: Not all Christians are anti-science creationists, and scientists don't formulate theories to show disdain for theistic beliefs. I'm sorry you felt the question was a jab at your beliefs, but I highly doubt it was intended to offend. In any case, this website isn't here to cater to your personal worldview. I don't think classifying humans as apes is controversial for the vast majority of scientists, or to the quiz-taking public in general.
The nice thing about science is that it's true whether you believe it or not. Humans and chimpanzees are more closely related (in the direct, simple-to-understand sense that they have a more recent common ancestor) than are chimpanzees and orangutans; therefore if chimpanzees and orangutans are both apes, humans must be as well. These aren't arguments from "disdain"; they are facts--things which can be proved.
As an individual, you can certainly believe things that are contrary to reality; but the fact that flat earthers exist doesn't mean we have to strike our trivia quizzes of questions about the earth's circumference. The fact that (young-earth) creationists exist or that Bible literalists exist doesn't mean we have to ignore reality to accommodate.
I would strongly suggest you take the time to understand scientific research to clear up these misconceptions you have about it being anti-Christian.
Humans being apes is basically a fact, and the creation story you refer to is a religious belief not remotely based in reality so has no relevance here at all.
I really don't think just because you believe or not that we are animals (which we clearly are!) doesn't mean that you don't believe in god. How do you know god didn't create us to be apes? Evolution is real there is lots of evidence to prove it. Also, we give birth, milk our young, have to eat to survive, then die just like apes/animals! We are clearly animals! But it doesn't mean that god didn't create us.
Even without invoking evolutionary theory, apes are classified based on shared anatomical features (like lack of tails, larger brains, specific limb structures) into the superfamily Hominoidea, containing Gibbons (Hylobatidae, lesser apes) and Hominidae (great apes: orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, humans), a system that groups them as tailless Old World monkeys, though common names can be confusing; this grouping reflects their physical similarities and nested relationships, even without specifying their common ancestry.
Ah, but the question doesn't say that all widows know where their husbands are at all times, just that all women who know where their husbands are at all times are widows. It's like how all lions are cats, but not all cats are lions.
If the widow is religious, how can she be certain her husband is in heaven, hell, purgatory, reincarnated, or in some other afterlife depending on her religious beliefs?
But at the same time your logic implies the skeleton or ashes of the widow's husband is the exact same being as her husband. There is a difference between her husband and a skeleton of a dead person or ashes of her dead husband.
In which case, assuming she doesn't believe in any sort of an afterlife, she would know that he is, in fact, exactly nowhere at all times, which still fits the criteria.
The question isn't "Tell me the capital of Japan" it's "Can you guess the capital of Japan?" The answer to "Can you guess" is either yes or no. Either will be an acceptable answer.
My eighth grade History teacher stopped using that formulation when he asked "Can you describe the terms of the Treaty of Versailles" on a quiz and some wise guy answered "Yes."
Excellent quiz, loved the twists, but come on, who else has never head of Edam? I solved it like ages before I typed it but had just passed it off lmao
The question is not asking for the percentage of soldiers who died during the American civil war. It is just asking what percentage of the soldiers who fought in the American civil war are no longer alive. The civil war happened in the 19th century. Nobody born in the 19th century is still alive.
The one of apes, China doesn't even have a single ape. Indonesia, Brazil, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo do. You should fix that. Plus, if it were China why? Please explain.
The most common species of ape by far has a population of over 8 billion. It's found in almost every part of the world, with China and India having the largest populations.
China has no other species of great apes except maybe in zoos, but does have a small number of wild gibbons (lesser apes).
Awesome quiz! For the "Why can't a man marry his widow's sister" question, could you put the word "DEAD" as a CONTAINS type-in, because I tried many things such as "man is dead", "the man is dead", etc.
It might help to know that one meaning of "to want" is "to lack, need" ("It wants only a coat of paint to be perfect"). This was once its main meaning.
Surely with today's technology we can observe temperatures on other planets. If the James Webb Telescope can tell the composition of the atmosphere on planets light years away, don't tell me it can't observe what the temperature is on Neptune
The trick isn't that temperatures on other planets can't be observed, it's that scientists on Earth have created near-absolute zero conditions in a lab before. And while Neptune is cold it's nowhere near as cold as absolute zero, so the lowest temperature ever recorded in the universe is... right here in a lab on Earth!
Northerner here (England)... We call the evening meal "Tea" anywhere north of Birmingham (Breakfast, Dinner, Tea)... So was struggling when it didn't accept it. Then I realised and had to go all posh by typing Dinner.
As a Dutch non-native English speaker, I'd heard of hands for a clock before, but not 'face'. I know face can be used to describe the front or centerpiece of a structure though
Why is Earth the tricky answer for the temperature question? Is it because no scientist has physically been to other planets/because they produced temperatures colder than any other planet in a lab/because the scientists were on Earth while observing the lower temperatures on other planets/other?
The question doesn't ask about Noah's Ark, but how many animals Moses took on the ark. Moses didn't have anything to do with the ark that carried animals, so the answer is zero. It's like asking how many cell phones George Washington owned.
Did other Brits struggle with the Civil War question because of the wording? If deaths after the war were included I reckon we would always say 'have died', though I realise this particular question wouldn't work if phrased like that.
I haven't explained that well but I think the UK players will know what I mean.
Not to mention the fact that not all soldiers died in the American Civil War. There wouldn't be an army left if that were the case. That question is just bad wording in general
The question isn't asking how many Civil War soldiers died in the Civil War, it's asking how many soldiers in the Civil War have since died, which is all of them.
As an individual, you can certainly believe things that are contrary to reality; but the fact that flat earthers exist doesn't mean we have to strike our trivia quizzes of questions about the earth's circumference. The fact that (young-earth) creationists exist or that Bible literalists exist doesn't mean we have to ignore reality to accommodate.
Humans being apes is basically a fact, and the creation story you refer to is a religious belief not remotely based in reality so has no relevance here at all.
I have lost brain cells trying to figure these questions out
China has no other species of great apes except maybe in zoos, but does have a small number of wild gibbons (lesser apes).
In Dutch we say "pointers" and "pointers plate" if you would translate it literally.
For chris onw i tryed with she is a woman, she is her daugther, only girl was rigth aparently
Also the widow one "she is called dead" or decease should be aldo accepted
The idea is to get the trick not the specific world
Also i didnt get the moby dick one?
Love it!
I read it as "what percent of American soldiers died?"
Also, can't dinner and lunch come before lunch because of the day before?
I haven't explained that well but I think the UK players will know what I mean.
Great fun anyway - thanks.
Nowhere in the question does it state that it's only counting meals on a per-day basis!
Apparently the answer to the eighth one was not ‘thalidomide baby’.