Our brain loves to go fast. Too fast. Faced with a series of actions, it tends to add them up mechanically: 2 broken + 2 fried + 2 eaten = 6. Problem solved, right? Not at all.
The trap lies here: the text never states that these actions involve different eggs. We make this assumption without realizing it. We imagine six separate eggs, each used individually, when nothing indicates this.
Let’s break it down calmly, step by step.
Let’s start from the beginning, calmly, as if we were explaining the riddle to a friend over coffee.
Initially, I have 6 eggs.
I break 2 eggs. Very well. They are broken, but they still exist.
I’m frying two eggs. To fry an egg, you first have to crack it. So it makes sense that these two eggs are the same as the ones that have already been cracked.
I eat 2 eggs. Again, it’s obvious that these are the eggs I just fried.
In other words, all three actions concern exactly the same 2 eggs.
The correct (and surprising) answer
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