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[personal profile] taylweaver
At Shabbat dinner, AF posed the following challenge: Cut a donut into twelve pieces using only three straight slices. It helps to think of it as a bagel, because donuts come in a broader variety of shapes - but bagels are generally round with a hole in the center. Also, they are less likely to crumble when sliced.

And no, you are not allowed to move the pieces of the bagel - no using the stack and slice strategy that [livejournal.com profile] mysticengineer and I both generated independently of each other. There is actually a way to keep the bagel in its original bagel shape and make three straight slices and get twelve pieces.

I know it is possible.

How do I know? Because i just did it.

And it is a rather elegant solution - if a bit difficult to execute, as it requires rather precise cuts. So I must admit that I cheated a bit when making the actual slices, because it is difficult to be precise when using playdough and a plastic knife - so I had to use my fingers to fix the places where the knife went awry - but it worked!

Side note about the playdough: many thanks to [livejournal.com profile] lexiefaye and [livejournal.com profile] flintknappy for a useful birthday gift - and how appropriate to get it from my "anthropology friends" - because it was [livejournal.com profile] maric23, the archaeologist, who suggested trying it out with clay and a wire. Your playdough was the best I had.

So thank you to [livejournal.com profile] maric23 for talking it out with me. And thank you to AF for posing the question.

And here is [livejournal.com profile] maric23's riddle for the evening (used in the context of a grammar class, if I recall correctly): A man without eyes saw plums on a tree. He neither took plums nor left plums. How can this be?

That one, I did not solve. But that's because it didn't fit my frame of reference.
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taylweaver

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