maia comments on Help come up with better meetup activity descriptions - Less Wrong
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Zendo
Zendo is a game where one player picks a rule and creates structures that follow that rule, and the other players try to discover the rule by building their own structures and asking whether those structures follow the rule. It can be used to practice induction and to learn to avoid confirmation bias. See Wikipedia for the exact rules.
Zendo, also known as 'Science: the game,' ...
Excellent suggestion, thank you! And with a bit of looking, I actually found an essay by someone who uses Zendo to teach the scientific method. I incorporated your suggestion, as well as a brief excerpt from his essay:
One early surprising result of Zendo is that what you think is an "easy" and "obvious" rule is probably illusion of transparency in action.
I think that might be due to the free-form nature of the rules. In
#lesswrong, we sometimes have lambdabot in chat, and lambdabot can evaluate (pure) Haskell functions, and also accepts private definitions of functions. So we can and do play Zendo with Haskell functions on integer triplets. Sometimes the functions are really difficult to guess, but no one seems to regard them as 'unfair'.