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Proving a witch weighs the same as a duck (Posted on 2005-02-21) Difficulty: 2 of 5
Suppose the witch weighs W pounds, and the duck weighs D pounds. Also, suppose their average weight is A pounds. (Their combined weight is 2A)

W + D = 2A. (Given)
W = 2A - D. (Subtract D)
W - 2A = -D (Subtract 2A)
W(W - 2A) = W(-D) (Multiply by W)
W(W - 2A) = (2A - D)(-D) (Substitute 2A-D for W using the given equation)
W² - 2AW = -2AD + D² (Distribute)
W² - 2AW + A² = D² - 2AD + A² (Add A²)
(W-A)(W-A)=(D-A)(D-A). (Factor)
(W-A)² = (D-A)². (An expression times itself equals the expression squared)
(W-A) = (D-A) (Square root)
W = D (Add A)

In other words, a witch weighs the same as a duck.

Where did I go wrong?

See The Solution Submitted by Dustin    
Rating: 3.0000 (4 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
PERHAPS | Comment 7 of 13 |
IT IS TRUE THAT (W-A)²=(D-A)², BUT THAT DOES NOT NECESSARILY MEAN THAT W-A = D-A . IT CAN BE SUCH :       A-B= -(D-A)
  Posted by Rex on 2005-02-22 14:40:02
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