Bell Boy Problem
Apr. 6th, 2018 02:02 pmThree men go to stay in a motel in a single room (their personal relationship is irrelevant to the problem). They are charged £300 and split it £100 each. Then the manager realises that they were massively overcharged, and the actual cost should only have been £25 total. The manager gives £275 to bellboy (so, not as much of a dive as I was imagining?).
But the bellboy, noticing 275 doesn't divide evenly into three, pockets £272, returning £1 to each of the men.
Now each man has paid £99 to stay in the room and 3 x £99 = £297. The bellboy has pocketed £272. £297 + £272 = £569 - so where is the missing £269?
When you put it like that, the maths is clearly screwed up. But when the original cost is £30, apparently it's easy to add the stolen money again instead of subtracting it.
But the bellboy, noticing 275 doesn't divide evenly into three, pockets £272, returning £1 to each of the men.
Now each man has paid £99 to stay in the room and 3 x £99 = £297. The bellboy has pocketed £272. £297 + £272 = £569 - so where is the missing £269?
When you put it like that, the maths is clearly screwed up. But when the original cost is £30, apparently it's easy to add the stolen money again instead of subtracting it.
no subject
Date: 2018-04-07 06:38 pm (UTC)Normally this was just moderately annoying - I'd say "it takes two men two hours to dig the holes", or whatever - but in this case although the fallacy is plainly obvious, this chap was too stupid (or obtuse, but I suspect stupid) to understand the explanation...