Are you being genuinely serious, or was that just two random numbers?
Google I imagine. The fun in this problem is knowing exactly how to solve it, not finding the answer.
Are you being genuinely serious, or was that just two random numbers?
Google I imagine. The fun in this problem is knowing exactly how to solve it, not finding the answer.
Nope, did it the other day, and bloody hell it hurt my head.![]()
I don't believe, for one second, that any of the people who claimed to arrive at the solution to this problem actually did so by any other means than google (it's a very famous problem).
No, most people haven't done it before - the problem is difficult. Whether or not people have heard the riddle before and are aware of the answer, that's a different story.Exactly, and many people have already done it before.
Now, the interesting bit is where Simon says "I know you don't know". As said in the OP, any even number is the sum of two primes. If the sum (which Simon knows) were even, then there was the possibility that both x and y were prime, meaning Peter would certainly have known the answer immediately. Since Simon knew there was no chance of this, we can infer that x + y is odd. Therefore we're looking at one even number x and one odd number y.
So x+y is odd.
x*y is even.
That's as far as I've got so far.
No, most people haven't done it before - the problem is difficult. Whether or not people have heard the riddle before and are aware of the answer, that's a different story.
Now, the interesting bit is where Simon says "I know you don't know". As said in the OP, any even number is the sum of two primes. If the sum (which Simon knows) were even, then there was the possibility that both x and y were prime, meaning Peter would certainly have known the answer immediately. Since Simon knew there was no chance of this, we can infer that x + y is odd. Therefore we're looking at one even number x and one odd number y.
So x+y is odd.
x*y is even.
That's as far as I've got so far.
Indeed.Sure, sure. You know best!![]()
What if x = 2 and y = 3? Then both of your criteria are satisfied, and yet Peter can immediately deduce from his product 6 that the two numbers must be 2 and 3.
Some odd numbers are also the sum of two primes, and 5 is one of them. Simon has the sum, so if the sum were 5, he wouldn't say "I know you don't know".