There was once a very forgetful landscape contractor who was constantly “misrembering” the detailed instructions of his employers. He was always forgetting essential parts of what the customer had intended and instead would substitute his own without realizing it. How he stayed in business as long as he did is a mystery. Here is one example of his forgetfulness:
The customer had two stone walls, each a square, one inside the other and a path that ran between. He wanted an irrigation pipe installed in the ground in the area inside the two walls.
"I've already measured everything. If you dig a trench and lay the water pipe in a circle it will be inscribed inside the outer wall and the inner wall will be inscribed in the circle. Do you understand what I'm saying?"
“No problem”, replied the contractor. “I’ll get to work as soon as I can get my equipment back here”.
When the contractor returned he proceeded to dig a square trench between and equidistant to the two walls and installed the pipe.
The customer came out to check on the installation. "That's not what I asked for. You have dug a square and not a circle", he said. "I suppose it doesn't really matter as long as things get watered. Since we agreed that I would pay you per foot of pipe installed, the bill will have to be changed."
Question
Prof. Templeton
There was once a very forgetful landscape contractor who was constantly “misrembering” the detailed instructions of his employers. He was always forgetting essential parts of what the customer had intended and instead would substitute his own without realizing it. How he stayed in business as long as he did is a mystery. Here is one example of his forgetfulness:
The customer had two stone walls, each a square, one inside the other and a path that ran between. He wanted an irrigation pipe installed in the ground in the area inside the two walls.
"I've already measured everything. If you dig a trench and lay the water pipe in a circle it will be inscribed inside the outer wall and the inner wall will be inscribed in the circle. Do you understand what I'm saying?"
“No problem”, replied the contractor. “I’ll get to work as soon as I can get my equipment back here”.
When the contractor returned he proceeded to dig a square trench between and equidistant to the two walls and installed the pipe.
The customer came out to check on the installation. "That's not what I asked for. You have dug a square and not a circle", he said. "I suppose it doesn't really matter as long as things get watered. Since we agreed that I would pay you per foot of pipe installed, the bill will have to be changed."
"Ummm...Oh, of course", replied the contractor.
What was the percentage of change in the bill?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
15 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.