Chapter: Arithmetical and Algebraic Problems

"And what was he? Forsooth, a great arithmetician." Othello, I. i.

The puzzles in this department are roughly thrown together in classes for the convenience of the reader. Some are very easy, others quite difficult. But they are not arranged in any order of difficulty—and this is intentional, for it is well that the solver should not be warned that a puzzle is just what it seems to be. It may, therefore, prove to be quite as simple as it looks, or it may contain some pitfall into which, through want of care or over-confidence, we may stumble.

Also, the arithmetical and algebraical puzzles are not separated in the manner adopted by some authors, who arbitrarily require certain problems to be solved by one method or the other. The reader is left to make his own choice and determine which puzzles are capable of being solved by him on purely arithmetical lines.

  1. Section: Money Puzzles
  2. Section: Age and Kinship Puzzles
  3. Section: Clock Puzzles
  4. Section: Locomotion and Speed Puzzles
  5. Section: Digital Puzzles
  6. Section: Various Arithmetical and Algebraic Problems

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References

Project Gutenberg

  1. Dudeney, H. E.: "Amusements in Mathematics", The Authors' Club, 1917

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