Martin Gardner, who inspired the gathering we report on in this article, died on Saturday. New Scientist consultant Jeff Hecht has written an assessment of his career on our CultureLab blog.
Gallery: Mathemagical visions: a Gathering for Gardner album
Gary Foshee, a collector and designer of puzzles from Issaquah near Seattle walked to the lectern to present his talk. It consisted of the following three sentences: "I have two children. One is a boy born on a Tuesday. What is the probability I have two boys?"
The event was the Gathering for Gardner earlier this year, a convention held every two years in Atlanta, Georgia, uniting mathematicians, magicians and puzzle enthusiasts. The audience was silent as they pondered the question.
"The first thing you think is 'What has Tuesday got to do with it?'" said Foshee, deadpan. "Well, it has everything to do with it." And then he stepped down from the stage.
The gathering is the world's premier celebration of recreational mathematics. Foshee's "boy born on a Tuesday" problem is a gem of the genre: easy to state, understandable to the layperson, yet with a completely counter-intuitive answer that can leave you with a smile on your face for days. If you have two children, and one is a boy, then the probability of having two boys is significantly different if you supply the extra information that the boy was born on a Tuesday. Don't believe me? We'll get to the answer later.
As a melting pot of outside-the-box abstract thinking, this gathering is one of a kind. Attendees were invited to make the world's first snub dodecahedron out of balloons, shown how to solve the Rubik's cube while blindfolded and given tips on how to place a lemon under a handkerchief without anyone knowing. The 300 guests included magicians, origamists, artists, maze designers, puzzle writers, toy inventors and cognitive psychologists, as well as some of the world's most gifted mathematicians
Gallery: Mathemagical visions: a Gathering for Gardner album
Gary Foshee, a collector and designer of puzzles from Issaquah near Seattle walked to the lectern to present his talk. It consisted of the following three sentences: "I have two children. One is a boy born on a Tuesday. What is the probability I have two boys?"
The event was the Gathering for Gardner earlier this year, a convention held every two years in Atlanta, Georgia, uniting mathematicians, magicians and puzzle enthusiasts. The audience was silent as they pondered the question.
"The first thing you think is 'What has Tuesday got to do with it?'" said Foshee, deadpan. "Well, it has everything to do with it." And then he stepped down from the stage.
The gathering is the world's premier celebration of recreational mathematics. Foshee's "boy born on a Tuesday" problem is a gem of the genre: easy to state, understandable to the layperson, yet with a completely counter-intuitive answer that can leave you with a smile on your face for days. If you have two children, and one is a boy, then the probability of having two boys is significantly different if you supply the extra information that the boy was born on a Tuesday. Don't believe me? We'll get to the answer later.
As a melting pot of outside-the-box abstract thinking, this gathering is one of a kind. Attendees were invited to make the world's first snub dodecahedron out of balloons, shown how to solve the Rubik's cube while blindfolded and given tips on how to place a lemon under a handkerchief without anyone knowing. The 300 guests included magicians, origamists, artists, maze designers, puzzle writers, toy inventors and cognitive psychologists, as well as some of the world's most gifted mathematicians






