The only trouble I see is that “koan” makes it totally okay to think about it for a while without finding the answer, while “puzzle” might cause people to propose solutions.
Given that most people seem likely to look at the koan and think “yeah, I could solve that if I thought about it for a while” and then move on without actually thinking about it, anything that actually gets people to think about it seems like a good thing.
The goal is to apply those algorithms we call “rationality” towards solving the koan, one of which involves withholding even just mentally formulating solutions as much as possible, and instead just thinking about the elements and properties of the problem properly without subjecting oneself to hack heuristics.
The word puzzle is, for most people, loaded with a trained impulse to shoot the first solution-sounding thing that pops to mind so that you can see whether you get a hedon / tribal status coin for a good answer or not.
However, the trained behavior of most people when facing a puzzle is to look at it for a few seconds and then throw the first good-sounding solution you can think of.
Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Either they’ll get a right answer despite throwing the first possible solution at it, or they’ll widely miss the mark, in which case they might actually realize that they’ve learned something by the time that the right answer is demonstrated.
You have a point. My (subconscious) priors on that end are skewed towards “Never, ever throw out solutions before you’ve laid things out properly” because of lots and lots of little personal experiences with complete failure modes due to stopping with the first solution I found.
What about “riddle” or “puzzle”?
The only trouble I see is that “koan” makes it totally okay to think about it for a while without finding the answer, while “puzzle” might cause people to propose solutions.
Given that most people seem likely to look at the koan and think “yeah, I could solve that if I thought about it for a while” and then move on without actually thinking about it, anything that actually gets people to think about it seems like a good thing.
The only trouble is if people then have to unthink things, which humans are notoriously bad at :P
People have already been proposing solutions to the “koans”, and I don’t understand why that’s a bad thing.
The goal is to apply those algorithms we call “rationality” towards solving the koan, one of which involves withholding even just mentally formulating solutions as much as possible, and instead just thinking about the elements and properties of the problem properly without subjecting oneself to hack heuristics.
The word puzzle is, for most people, loaded with a trained impulse to shoot the first solution-sounding thing that pops to mind so that you can see whether you get a hedon / tribal status coin for a good answer or not.
Alright. I see where you’re coming from, though I doubt that “puzzle” and “koan” have as many deep connotations as you claim.
Maybe the right thing to do is to actually write something to the effect of “Here is how you should be approaching these puzzles/koans”?
“Puzzle” is good because it suggests that there is a solution, whereas some “problems” don’t have solutions, because they are simply confused.
However, the trained behavior of most people when facing a puzzle is to look at it for a few seconds and then throw the first good-sounding solution you can think of.
Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Either they’ll get a right answer despite throwing the first possible solution at it, or they’ll widely miss the mark, in which case they might actually realize that they’ve learned something by the time that the right answer is demonstrated.
You have a point. My (subconscious) priors on that end are skewed towards “Never, ever throw out solutions before you’ve laid things out properly” because of lots and lots of little personal experiences with complete failure modes due to stopping with the first solution I found.