Search: +ex:BP339
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BP571 |
| Bongard Problems that require mathematical understanding to solve vs. other Bongard Problems. |
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BP653 |
| Bongard Problem with solution relating to concept: intersection (of sets) vs. Bongard Problem unrelated to this concept. |
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BP657 |
| Bongard Problem with solution relating to concept: left / right vs. Bongard Problem unrelated to this concept. |
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BP713 |
| Bongard Problem with solution relating to concept: union (of sets) vs. Bongard Problem unrelated to this concept. |
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BP789 |
| Bongard Problems in which all examples have the same format, a specific multi-part structure vs. other Bongard Problems. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "structure" on the OEBP.
Examples of "structures": Bongard Problem, Bongard Problem with extra unsorted panel ("Bongard's Dozen"), 4-panel analogy grid, sequence of objects with a quantity changing by a constant amount.
If the solver hasn't become familiar with the featured structure, the Bongard Problem's solution may seem convoluted or inelegant. (See keyword assumesfamiliarity.) Once the solver gets used to seeing a particular structure it becomes easier to read that structure and solve Bongard Problems featuring it.
A Bongard Problem can non-verbally teach someone how a particular structure works, showing valid examples of that structure versus non-examples. E.g., BP968 for the structure of Bongard Problems and BP981 for the structure of analogy grids. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP784 BP785 BP786 BP787 BP788  *  BP790 BP791 BP792 BP793 BP794
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KEYWORD
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meta (see left/right), links, keyword
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WORLD
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bp [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP908 |
| Ordered triplet comparison Bongard Problems vs. unordered triplet comparison Bongard Problems |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "orderedtriplet" on the OEBP.
Right examples have the keyword "unorderedtriplet" on the OEBP.
An ordered triplet can be totally ordered (swapping any 2 objects would change the information being conveyed by the panel) or partially ordered (unordered pair and a 3rd object that relates to the pair). |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP903 BP904 BP905 BP906 BP907  *  BP909 BP910 BP911 BP912 BP913
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KEYWORD
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meta (see left/right), links, keyword
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WORLD
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triplet_comparison_bp [smaller | same | bigger] zoom in left (ordered_triplet_comparison_bp)
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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BP1188 |
| Bongard Problems where there exists an overlap between the collections shown left and right vs. other Bongard Problems. |
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COMMENTS
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Left-sorted Bongard Problems have the keyword "both" on the OEBP.
The archetypal example is "rhombuses vs. rectangles".
Notice "rhombuses vs. rectangles" could alternatively be interpreted as "not rectangles vs. not rhombuses"; by this less natural interpretation, a square would fit on neither side (keyword neither) rather than both.
In fact, for any Bongard Problem solution "A vs. B", there are three alternative solution descriptions: "A vs. not A", "not B vs. B", and "not B vs. not A". These are not necessarily just different wordings of the same answer. For example, "rhombuses vs. not rhombuses" and "not rectangles vs. rectangles" differ on where they would sort a square. (This discrepancy between "A vs. not A" and "B vs. not B" occurs whenever "A vs. B" does not sort all relevant cases. See the keyword allsorted.)
"Is a rhombus" and "is a rectangle" are what are on the OEBP called "narrow" patterns, while "is not a rectangle" and "is not a rhombus" are not. (See keywords left-narrow and right-narrow for more explanation.) |
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CROSSREFS
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The keywords both and allsorted are mutually exclusive.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1183 BP1184 BP1185 BP1186 BP1187  *  BP1189 BP1190 BP1191 BP1192 BP1193
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KEYWORD
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meta (see left/right), links, keyword
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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