MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C
[7933] MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C - The aim is to place the some numbers from the list (18, 19, 21, 25, 26, 28, 45, 46, 47, 48, 53, 62) into the empty squares and squares marked with A, B an C. Sum of each row and column should be equal. All the numbers of the magic square must be different. Find values for A, B, and C. Solution is A*B*C. - #brainteasers #math #magicsquare - Correct Answers: 0
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MAGIC SQUARE: Calculate A*B*C

The aim is to place the some numbers from the list (18, 19, 21, 25, 26, 28, 45, 46, 47, 48, 53, 62) into the empty squares and squares marked with A, B an C. Sum of each row and column should be equal. All the numbers of the magic square must be different. Find values for A, B, and C. Solution is A*B*C.
Correct answers: 0
#brainteasers #math #magicsquare
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Toilet Paper Named

An Indian girl walked into a general store and asked the clerk for some toilet paper. So the clerk says, "Well, we have two brands of toilet paper: Toilet Paper Royal and the generic kind which doesn't have a name."

So the Indian girl asks, "What's the difference?", to which the clerk replies, "The generic brand is cheaper." So the Indian girl buys the generic brand and walks home.

The next day she walks into the store with the roll of toilet paper and says, "I have found a name for this toilet paper."

Curious the clerk says, "Well what is it?"

The girl replies, "John Wayne, because it's rough and it's tough and it don't take no crap from Indians."

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Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz

Born 12 Dec 1890; died 12 Apr 1963 at age 72.Polish logician and semanticist who was the chief contributor to the Warsaw school of philosophy and logic, and is credited with developing in 1920 the first deductive theory for the study of logic based on syntax. The dominant theme of Ajdukiewicz's thought was the problem of the dependence of our knowledge and conception of knowledge on language. His main contributions are in the field of logical syntax (with the theory of semantical categories) and in epistemology, with the so-called “radical conventionalism,”a doctrine where he claimed that there exist conceptual apparatuses which are not intertranslatable and that scientific knowledge grows through the replacement of one such conceptual apparatus by another.
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