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by rappatic
456 days ago
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I think: Call the three numbers a, b, and c. This means c = a + b, but we still don’t know to which person each number belongs. When person 1 (p1) is asked what his number is, he has no way to know whether he has a, b, or c, so he says he doesn’t know. Same goes for p2 and p3. Clearly p1 somehow gains information by p2 and p3 passing. Either he realizes that he must be either a or b, and such his number is the difference between p2 and p3’s numbers, or he realizes that he must be c and so his number is the sum of p2 and p3’s numbers. That’s all I have so far. Anyone have other ideas? |
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P1 knows that P2 and P3 are not equal. So they know that the set isn't [2A, A, A].
P2 knows that P1 and P3 are not equal. So they know that the set isn't [A, 2A, A]. They also know that if P1 doesn't know, then they were able to make the same deduction. So they now know that both [2A, A, A] and [A, 2A, A] aren't correct. Since they know that [2A, A, A] isn't correct, they can also know that [2A, 3A, A] isn't correct either. Because they'd be able to see if P1 = 2A and P3 = A, and if that were true and P1 doesn't know their number, it would have to be because P2 isn't A. And if P2 isn't A, they'd have to be 3A.
P3 knows that P1 and P2 aren't equal. Eliminates [A, A, 2A]. Knows that [2A, A, A], [A, 2A, A], and [2A, 3A, A], are eliminated. Using the same process as P2, they can eliminate [2A, A, 3A], [A, 2A, 3A], and also [2A, 3A, 5A]. Because they can see the numbers and they know if P1 is 2A and P2 is 3A.
Now we're back at P1. Who now knows.
So P2 and P3 are in the eliminated sets. Which means we're one of these
[2A, A, A]; [3A, 2A, A]; [4A, 3A, A]; [3A, A, 2A]; [4A, A, 3A]; [5A, 2A, 3A]; [8A, 3A, 5A]
We know his number is 65. To find the set, we can factor 65: (5 * 13). We can check the other numbers 2(13) = 26. 3(13) = 39. And technically, you don't need to find the other numbers. The final answer is 5A * 2A * 3A or (A^3) * 30.