Monday 4 February 2013

Spot The Leopard

Even a puzzle at the humble level of a wordsearch demonstrates interesting enigmatic features.  
First of all, because it involves a finite search space, effort— particularly if undertaken in a systematic way— is bound to be rewarded (Seek and ye shall find).
If you want to be systematic, it raises the strategic question: what might an efficient searching procedure be?(In this case, as you need to find LEOPARD you might, for example, first locate the Ls).
Now you might consider that such tasks have little intrinsic merit. In fact they teach focus, tenacity and reframing. Children enjoy them, and they also can find their uses in cognitive rehabilitation. It is more a question of finding what sort of puzzle is of use to whom.
In everyday life most problems are difficult or partially insoluble, and involve stress because they have consequences. Doing simple kinds of puzzle and tasks without consequences in the external world can return one for a while the feeling of being in control. Even the illusion of control, can be recreative and de-stressing.
Finally notice that the square contains all the information required, but it is not immediately perceivable. (You can't see the wood for the trees.) In fact if you hadn't been told that there was a word hidden there you might not stumble across it.
This tells us something about our perceptual system, that we do not merely see what is there, unmediated, but only that which is perceived (ultimately from Latin percipio: meaning I seize upon, or I take in, and hence I observe). This is because, although the image falls upon the eye, and is therefore in that sense not invisible, it is not immediately construable as the word LEOPARD on a background of irrelevant dross. That is the task the brain must perform in turning some of what enters the eye into what we see. That is the puzzle the brain must solve in enabling us to understand what we are seeing.
The fact that this task can be harder or easier to perform is the essential ingredient of camouflage in animals, where the game is to fool the perceptual system of the predator.
But revenons à nos moutons. There are 12 animals in all (the leopard being one of them). Do any of the words in the word search be diagonal? Might some go up and some down? That's for you to find out.

B Q M H H G M O Q P S M
C R F Q P Y T N T M Y M
Z S R T P I Y P E L X T
G T V G T H D L E M A C
S F Y O R P M O O Y I A
R U Y H Z F P N F B A T
M T J E W A K H N O I L
S C M G R E H D O G F L
G W I D Y G E L E R G C
A M I E F F A R I G S W
E R C H T N A H P E L E
V E T T L Y A U T R K C


2 comments:

Richard Woods said...

Is the answer a camel then?

daniel said...

I got 13 animals (if I'm allowed to have GOBY).