Wednesday 23 March 2011

Another thing before i go pap...

A colleague at work today told me this, and dear me, it got me thinking!


Three men go for a meal in a restaurant. At the end of the meal the waiter brings them the bill and it comes to £30. Each man puts in a ten pound note. The waiter rings it up and then realizes he made a mistake and the bill was actually for £25.


The waiter brings back five pound coins. As five doesn’t divide into three very well, the men take one pound each and leave two pounds as a tip which the waiter pockets.


Each man has now paid 9 pounds, which adds up to £27. The waiter has 2 pounds in his pocket. That adds up to £29.


What happened to the extra pound from the original £30?


Try as hard as you like to make the formula for that work and there will always be one pound missing.


The answer is that there never was an extra pound.


The three men paid £27 and the waiter took two leaving £25.


The way the conundrum is worded leads you to believe that there was £27 with £2 added to give £29, and therefore one pound short of £30, with £1 missing.


It is a good example of how easy it is to mislead somebody’s thinking so they mathematically “prove" something to be other than it is.






So, pretty interesting eh?







original source - http://searchwarp.com/swa2642.htm 

7 comments:

  1. Classic problem that one, takes me back to GCSE maths

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  2. hhahaha i would have pulled hair out over that if they'd asked for an answer and i didn't know that!

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  3. Pretty much proves I'm an idiot.

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  4. haha things like this just make you feel stupid.

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  5. Yehh, heard this one before. Still gets me though.

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  6. Im shit at maths, so this was confusing.

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  7. that puzzle is the bane of my life

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