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BP874 Solution is a quantity comparison vs. solution does not involve quantity.
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
CROSSREFS

See BP873 for comparisons based on discrete quantities vs. comparisons based on continuous quantities. All examples in that Bongard Problem fit left here.


Similar to BP200 with sides flipped. (However, "Bongard Problem based on quantity" is a more general criterion than "Bongard Problem based on discrete counting.")


See BP507 for the version with links to pages on the OEBP instead of images of Bongard Problems (miniproblems).

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP869 BP870 BP871 BP872 BP873  *  BP875 BP876 BP877 BP878 BP879

KEYWORD

meta (see left/right), miniproblems, creativeexamples, assumesfamiliarity, structure, presentationinvariant

WORLD

bpimage_shapes [smaller | same | bigger]
zoom in left (bpimage_shapes_quantity_soln)

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

BP875 Bongard Problem would sort all relevant examples vs. possible objects similar to those seen on both sides would have no clear sorting.
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Left examples partition a pool of objects cleanly into two classes.

CROSSREFS

See BP509 (keyword "allsorted") for the version with links to pages on the OEBP instead of images of Bongard Problems.

The left side implies BP876left.

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP870 BP871 BP872 BP873 BP874  *  BP876 BP877 BP878 BP879 BP880

KEYWORD

hard, challenge, meta (see left/right), miniproblems, creativeexamples, assumesfamiliarity, structure, presentationinvariant

WORLD

bpimage_shapes [smaller | same | bigger]
zoom in left | zoom in right

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

BP876 Precise sorting of potential examples vs. not so.
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Left Bongard Problems do not have to sort all relevant examples; if they would leave some border cases unsorted, it just has to be clear precisely which examples those would be.


Often a precise divide between values on a spectrum comes from intuitively "crossing a threshold." For example, there is an intuitive threshold between acute and obtuse angles. Two sides of a Bongard Problem on opposite ends of a threshold, coming close to it, are interpreted as having precise divide between sides, right up against that threshold.

CROSSREFS

See BP508 for the version with links to pages on the OEBP instead of images of Bongard Problems.

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP871 BP872 BP873 BP874 BP875  *  BP877 BP878 BP879 BP880 BP881

KEYWORD

hard, notso, challenge, meta (see left/right), miniproblems, creativeexamples, assumesfamiliarity, structure, presentationinvariant

WORLD

bpimage_shapes [smaller | same | bigger]
zoom in left (bpimage_shapes_exact_sort)

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

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