Prove that at any time there are two opposite points along the Equator, which have exactly the same temperature. Assume the temperature function varies continuously as you move along the Equator.
Counterargument: This is patently impossible. If there are such points on the Equator, there must also be similar points on any circle around the Earth, such as a meridian. But in that case, we'd have one point in the north hemisphere, in winter, and the other in the south, in summer; that doesn't make sense!
What's wrong with this reasoning?
The points along the equator are all horizontal. The false reasoning is for points vertically. Why must there "also be similar points on any circle around the Earth"?
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Posted by kat
on 2005-04-06 01:15:24 |