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Real-Life Decision Making

Magic works because people are willing to be fooled, say magicians. The magician who is confident and smooth can trick just about anyone who is willing.

But sometimes, magicians encounter audiences or audience members who aren't so cooperative. Hecklers can ruin a good magic show, but even someone with a keen and skeptical eye can spot the seams in a good piece of magic.

You're onstage at a community theater, working your way through your usual routine of tricks. You notice early on in the show that a person in the front row is not only watching you especially closely, but also taking notes and continually flipping back and forth in a book of magic. He's trying to uncover your secrets.

You try to put him out of your mind. But as your show progresses, you realize he is talking to those around him, pointing and whispering -- and quite possibly revealing your secrets.

You have just begun one of your favorite tricks, one in which you make your assistant disappear by placing her inside a locked box. Usually, you leave the box out in the open, but you're now really worried he'll leap up and shout out the secret to this trick.

What do you do?

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