L
legg
Guest
On Sat, 2 May 2009 17:15:50 -0700 (PDT), Mark-T
<MarkTanner50@gmail.com> wrote:
There's no reason for the duck to leave the pond.
The only problem I see with the elaborate solution is the assumption
that the obviously ill 'killer' rabbit will react in any way to the
presence of suits around the pond's periphery. After all, a rabbit
with any sense wouldn't be in the middle of a pond in the first place.
RL
<MarkTanner50@gmail.com> wrote:
At least it makes more 'sense' than the duck and the fox.DId anyone here see the problem presented in
the Science section of NY Times last week?
Quite startling, to see something so sophisticated
in a 'general readership' publication.
Is it solvable without a calculus of variations approach?
There's no reason for the duck to leave the pond.
The only problem I see with the elaborate solution is the assumption
that the obviously ill 'killer' rabbit will react in any way to the
presence of suits around the pond's periphery. After all, a rabbit
with any sense wouldn't be in the middle of a pond in the first place.
RL