Anyone who is fond of cerebral solutions will inevitably be very disappointed when the problem at hand is solved in the exact same way by all, regardless of their ability to think. If someone asks you how you can know about B, provided you know A, the question simply doesn’t lead to a solution. Still, a cerebral person often tries to avoid the sense that no amount of thought can demystify the object he was presented with. He’ll come to create some copious connection between A and B and then, on what to him is the way to a solution, be faced with an immovable monolith. For other people the problem ceases to exist, due to its irrational formulation: indeed, to solve this problem was to dismiss its formulation.
No one will clap for you because you had battles with Laestrygonians on your way to the kitchen table. And yet, if Laestrygonians start running towards you, you cannot but face them, forgetting about the original problem which – due to your own fault – caused them to appear. Enchanted and terrified by the sight of the two-meter tall human-eaters, you no longer have time to think how strange it is that everyone else passed without a battle from what appears to be the exact same spot.