A Tangled Tale by Lewis Carroll (best novels for beginners TXT) ๐
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In the late 19th century, Lewis Carrollโbetter known these days as the author of Aliceโs Adventures in Wonderlandโwas also an established mathematician who had published many books and papers in the fields of algebra and logic. His mathematical interest extended to the setting of puzzles for popular consumption. The stories collected here cover varied subjects including the cataloguing of paintings, the number of times trains will pass each other on a circular track, the most efficient way to rent individual rooms on a square, and many more. They were published originally in The Monthly Packet magazine and then collected with some additional commentary into a book originally published in 1885. Included along with the stories is a full appendix with Carrollโs answers, and his often acerbic commentary on the answers submitted to him at the time.
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- Author: Lewis Carroll
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Of the five partly-right solutions, Rags and Tatters and Mad Hatter (who send one answer between them) make No. 25 6 units from the corner instead of 5. Cheam, E. R. D. L., and Meggy Potts leave openings at the corners of the Square, which are not in the data: moreover Cheam gives values for the distances without any hint that they are only approximations. Crophi and Mophi make the bold and unfounded assumption that there were really 21 houses on each side, instead of 20 as stated by Balbus. โWe may assume,โ they add, โthat the doors of Nos. 21, 42, 63, 84, are invisible from the centre of the Squareโ! What is there, I wonder, that Crophi and Mophi would not assume?
Of the five who are wholly right, I think Bradshaw Of the Future, Caius, Clifton C., and Martreb deserve special praise for their full analytical solutions. Matthew Matticks picks out No. 9, and proves it to be the right house in two ways, very neatly and ingeniously, but why he picks it out does not appear. It is an excellent synthetical proof, but lacks the analysis which the other four supply.
Class List.
Bradshaw of the Future.
Caius.
Clifton C.
Martreb.
Matthew Matticks.
Cheam.
Crophi and Mophi.
E. R. D. L.
Meggy Potts.
Rags and Tatters.
Mad Hatter.
A remonstrance has reached me from Scrutator on the subject of Knot I, which he declares was โno problem at all.โ โTwo questions,โ he says, โare put. To solve one there is no data: the other answers itself.โ As to the first point, Scrutator is mistaken; there are (not โisโ) data sufficient to answer the question. As to the other, it is interesting to know that the question โanswers itself,โ and I am sure it does the question great credit: still I fear I cannot enter it on the list of winners, as this competition is only open to human beings.
Answers to Knot IIIProblem.โ โ(1) โTwo travellers, starting at the same time, went opposite ways round a circular railway. Trains start each way every 15 minutes, the easterly ones going round in 3 hours, the westerly in 2. How many trains did each meet on the way, not counting trains met at the terminus itself?โ (2) โThey went round, as before, each traveller counting as โoneโ the train containing the other traveller. How many did each meet?โ
Answers.โ โ(1) 19. (2) The easterly traveller met 12; the other 8.
The trains one way took 180 minutes, the other way 120. Let us take the L. C. M., 360, and divide the railway into 360 units. Then one set of trains went at the rate of 2 units a minute and at intervals of 30 units; the other at the rate of 3 units a minute and at intervals of 45 units. An easterly train starting has 45 units between it and the first train it will meet: it does โ ths of this while the other does โ ths, and thus meets it at the end of 18 units, and so all the way round. A westerly train starting has 30 units between it and the first train it will meet: it does โ ths of this while the other does โ ths, and thus meets it at the end of 18 units, and so all the way round. Hence if the railway be divided, by 19 posts, into 20 parts, each containing 18 units, trains meet at every post, and, in (1), each traveller passes 19 posts in going round, and so meets 19 trains. But, in (2), the easterly traveller only begins to count after traversing โ ths of the journey, i.e., on reaching the 8th post, and so counts 12 posts: similarly the other counts 8. They meet at the end of โ ths of 3 hours, or โ ths of 2 hours, i.e., 72 minutes.
Forty-five answers have been received. Of these 12 are beyond the reach of discussion, as they give no working. I can but enumerate their names. Ardmore, E. A., F. A. D., L. D., Matthew Matticks, M. E. T., Poo-Poo, and The Red Queen are all wrong. Beta and Rowena have got (1) right and (2) wrong. Cheeky Bob and Nairam give the right answers,
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