(In reply to
re: No Subject by ed bottemiller)
Ed,
I agree with your last comment. I probably did not make myself clear enough in my earlier post. I suspect where we part company is in your observation that We need to show that for no set of 20 randomly selected positive integers less than EN, without duplication, can there be any subset abcd which meets the addition test.
What the question in fact calls for, howver, is the maximal value of EN that guarantees the stipulated duplicate, which is a slightly different problem answered in part by the first section of my previous post; as a matter of logic we can be quite sure that there must be the stipulated duplicate if x is less than 190.
My conjecture is stronger, and is that the smallest possible number for which there is at least one (non-randomly selected) subset, S, having the required number of 20 elements, with no stipulated duplicate, is greater than 190, and is in fact 333. This is of course the same as saying that 332 is the largest possible number for which it is possible to be certain, without further verification, that each and every randomly selected S will surely contain the stipulated duplicate, which is what I believe is what the question was asking for.
I trust that this assists,
Broll
Edited on July 15, 2010, 5:25 pm
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Posted by broll
on 2010-07-15 17:16:16 |