MARCH 4TH, 2017

J: The Beatles will have pie.  The next task is adding up all the pie.

S: Wait!  We need to add it in a special, more Beatle-y way than just adding.

J: John wants a 1/3 slice of pie.

S: Wow.  That’s a lot of pie.  But George was the hungry one who would ACTUALLY want 1/3 of a pie.

J: George wants all the rest of the pie after the other three have their slices.  Paul wants a 1/5 slice of pie.

S: George is going to get, like, nothing!

J: We’ll see.  Ringo wants a 1/7 slice of pie.

S: For fractions, isn’t there Euclid’s algorithm?

J: Yes.  You’re thinking of the least common multiple, and that’s exactly what you want here.  So, how much pie does George get?

S: Hmm… Well, I don’t remember Euclid’s algorithm!

J: That’s okay!  We don’t have to use it because I cleverly picked prime numbers for the denominators.

S: I still don’t know what to do.

J: Well, George gets the leftover pie, right?

S: Yes.

J: And that would be one pie minus John’s slice, Paul’s slice, and Ringo’s slice.

S: Yes.  But you aren’t supposed to draw a picture when you add fractions.

J: You can if you want to, but we don’t have to.  Let’s write how much John, Paul, and Ringo have all together.

S: That’s what I’ve been trying to do!

J: So, do it!

S: 1/3 + 1/5 + 1/7

J: These have different denominators.  We need to give them-

S: COMMON DENOMINATOR!  COMMON DENOMINATOR!  I remember how to do that!  Wait.  Too bad their only common factor is 1.  But, multiples!  So, 7 · 2 = 14; no; 7 · 3 = 21; no; oh!  I remembered 35, which is 5 · 7, and if I multiply 35 by 3… 35 · 3 = 105.  I got the least common multiple!

J: Yes!  Correct!  So, how many 105ths of a pie does John get?

S: However many times 3 goes into 105?

J: Correct.

S: Then it’s 35/105, or 1/3.  We’re back to where we started.

J: No, no, no!  Keep the 35/105!

S: This is not Beatle-y enough.  We have to find a Beatle-y way to actually DO the math.

J: Can’t we sneak that in at the end?

S: Oh, fine.  I just want this to be over as soon as possible… BECAUSE I’M NOT HAVING FUN!!!

J: So, how much pie does Paul get?

S: 3 · 7 · 1 = 21, so 21/105.

J: Yes.  And-

S: How much pie does Ringo get?  3 · 5 · 1 = 15, so 15/105.  And then we add up the numerators!  15 + 21 + 35 = 71, so, together, John, Paul, and Ringo get 71/105 of the pie.  What flavor is it?

J: It’s pumpkin.

S: If I knew the Beatles’ pie preferences, I could tell you if they’d actually eat it or not, but I don’t because detailed information like that is SO HARD TO FIND just searching Google!!!

J: It’s for a photo shoot.

S: ANOTHER one?

J: Well, how much pie does George get?

S: George gets 34/105.  Less than John by 1/105!  There was no “we’ll see”!!!  I WAS RIGHT!!!

J: But wait!  John gives 1/11 slice of pie to George!

S: Awwwwww…

J: Do you think George has more now?

S: Yes.

J: Because…?

S: 1/105 and 1/11 have the same numerator, and 11 is a smaller number than 105, meaning that it is a bigger fraction.  Wait!  I don’t understand if the 1/11 is 1/11 of the whole pie or 1/11 of John’s slice.

J: The whole pie.

S: Well, then what’s wrong with my reasoning?

J: So, now, this looks fine.  Now, what if John gave George 1/11 of John’s slice of the pie?

S: Ringo is most likely to do that, not John.

J: What if John steps out of the room, and Ringo gives George 1/11 of John’s slice of pie?

S: The point is that Ringo is too nice to do that!  Let’s just have George steal the 1/11.

J: Okay!  1/11 of John’s.

S: So, I should divide 35/105 by 11?  I know how to divide fractions.

J: Well, we could write John’s share in terms of 35/105 · 11/11.

S: That’s what I was going to do!  Except, what does multiplying by 1 do?

J: We’re writing it in terms of the least common multiple!

S: Which isn’t 11!  11 was just a number pulled from your head!

J: So, can you multiply that and find out what John’s share is in terms of those numbers that have 11 as a factor?

S: I understood none of that sentence.

J: Can you perform the mathematical operation indicated seven lines ago?

S: Sure!  35/105 · 11/11 = CALCULATOR.  *gets calculator and types in equation*  Okay.  It equals 385/1155.

J: Ah!  So, what’s 1/11 of that?

S: I know what to do!  On my calculator: whatever fraction is equivalent to 0.030303.

J: I would prefer the answer as a fraction of two integers.

S: Well, I forgot how to convert decimals to fractions, so poo-poo!

J: Well, then let’s go back to this step [five lines ago].  So, in the numerator, we have 35 · 11.  What’s 1/11 of 35 · 11?

S: Oh.  Two minutes left.  And you haven’t done the Beatle-y twist!

J: Well-

S: Ooo!  “Twist and Shout”!  The Beatle-y twist!

J: Well, what’s 1/11 of 385 · 11?

S: Sorry.  Bad reference.

J: Yes, at the end, they will dance to “Twist and Shout” while eating pie.

S: Was that your original plan?

J: No.  But, can you write 35 · 11 / 11?

S: Yes.  It is 35.

J: Yes.  And so, you just divided by 11, but you made it so easy.

S: Now tell me what your original plan was.

J: To solve an algebraic equation of four variables: John, Paul, George, and Ringo.

S: No!  I mean for the Beatle-y twist at the end!

J: I thought it was Beatle-y enough and that it would be done on one page!

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