Chessboard Paradox
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Chessboard Paradox
The chessboard paradoxGreg N. Frederickson: ''Dissections: Plane and Fancy''. Cambridge University Press, 2003, , chapter 23, pp. 268–277 in particular pp. 271–274 Colin Foster: "Slippery Slopes". In: ''Mathematics in School'', vol. 34, no. 3 (May, 2005), pp. 33–34JSTOR or paradox of Loyd and SchlömilchFranz Lemmermeyer: ''Mathematik à la Carte: Elementargeometrie an Quadratwurzeln mit einigen geschichtlichen Bemerkungen''. Springer 2014, , pp95–96(German) is a falsidical paradox based on an optical illusion. A chessboard or a square with a side length of 8 units is cut into four pieces. Those four pieces are used to form a rectangle with side lengths of 13 and 5 units. Hence the combined area of all four pieces is 64 area units in the square but 65 area units in the rectangle, this seeming contradiction is due an optical illusion as the four pieces don't fit exactly in the rectangle, but leave a small barely visible gap around the rectangle's diagonal. The paradox is s ...
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