So here's the puzzle. You're poisoned in the jungle and the only way to save yourself is to lick a special kind of frog. To make matters worse, only the female of that species will do. Licking the male frog doesn't do anything. The male and female frogs look identical. The only difference is that the male frog makes a sound and the female is silent.
So you run through the jungle and spot a frog in front of you. Before you could start running towards it you hear a sound behind you. You turn around and spot two frogs there. There's only time to run to one side.
Now, the best course of action is to run towards the two frogs and lick both. The reasoning is that there are 4 possible combinations of two frogs and knowing that one of them is male eliminates only one of those possibilities. Of the remaining three, two of them have at least one female frog. This gives you a $\frac 2 3$ chance of survival as opposed to a $\frac 1 2$ with the single frog.
Now here's my problem. The reason this works is because you don't know which frog made the sound. If you did, you'd have a $50\%$ chance with the other one. But wouldn't that imply that, if you for some reason turned around earlier to see which one made the sound, you would decrease your chances of survival? What's the explanation here?
Why is this a problem to you?
Suppose you had a lottery with 4 people. There are 3 blue pieces of paper and 1 red. Whoever draws the red will be killed. You figure your chances of surviving are 3 in 4. Person A (not you) is called forward and draws a paper. It's blue. So now you figure your chances of surviving have dropped to 2 in 3. How does knowing something lower your chances? Well, because it eliminates possibilities.
So why is this a problem with the frogs?
There are 8 possibilities for the gender of 3 frogs.
MM|M Back: BAD, Front BAD
MM|F Back: BAD, Front GOOD
MF|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
MF|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
FM|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
FM|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
FF|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
FF|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
So if you lick the front your chances of surviving are 4/8 = 1/2. If you lick the back your chances are 3/4.
If you hear a croak you eliminate 2 possibilities and are left with:
MM|M Back: BAD, Front BAD
MM|F Back: BAD, Front GOOD
MF|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
MF|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
FM|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
FM|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
FF|M Back: IMPOSSIBLE
FF|F Back: IMPOSSIBLE
Licking the front gives your chances at 3/6 = 1/2. Licking the back gives your chances at 4/6 = 2/3.
If you turn and see the first frog croak you've eliminated 4 possibilities and are left with:
MM|M Back: BAD, Front BAD
MM|F Back: BAD, Front GOOD
MF|M Back: GOOD, Front BAD
MF|F Back: GOOD, Front GOOD
FM|M IMPOSSIBLE
FM|F Back: IMPOSSIBLE
FF|M Back: IMPOSSIBLE
FF|F Back: IMPOSSIBLE
Now either you lick the back and your chances are 2/4 =1/2 or you lick the front and your chances are 2/4 = 1/2.