Description
These problems were selected from the Macalester College Problem of the Week archive. The Macalester tradition of a weekly problem was started by Joseph Konhauser in 1968. In 1993 Stan Wagon assumed problem-generating duties. A previous book written by Wagon, Konhauser, and Dan Velleman, Which Way Did the Bicycle Go?, gathered problems from the first twenty-five years of the archive. The title problem in that collection was inspired by an error in logic made by Sherlock Holmes, who attempted to determine the direction of a bicycle from the tracks of its wheels. Here the title problem asks whether a bicycle track can always be distinguished from a unicycle track. You'll be surprised by the answer.
About the Author
Daniel J. Velleman, Amherst College, MA, and University of Vermont, Burlington, VT,
Stan Wagon, Macalester College, St. Paul, MN
Book Information
ISBN 9781470447595
Author Daniel J. Velleman
Format Paperback
Page Count 286
Imprint American Mathematical Society
Publisher American Mathematical Society
Weight(grams) 415g