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                                        Chapter 38: Oedipus and the Sphinx
                                
                                                                                        
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                                        Chapter 40: There’s always a solution
                                
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... s famous. The simple solution to the riddle was not necessarily intuitive. For Greek peasants or laymen in mathematics, the riddle - or, in this case, the mathematical puzzle - was almost a coin toss. However, Priam stood on the shoulders of giants. If Sphinx intended to turn her riddles into a math problem, she would likely be disappointed.
"I had a one in three chance of picking the right door at the start and a two in three chance of getting it wrong. So if there is nothing behind doo ...
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