Kid came to me with a math problem while reading a food label.
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Kid came to me with a math problem while reading a food label.
"If this peanut butter has 25% less fat than normal peanut butter, how much more of this peanut butter would I have to eat to get the same amount as fat as regular peanut butter?"
ONLY GENIUSES CAN FIGURE THIS ONE OUT
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undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic
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Kid came to me with a math problem while reading a food label.
"If this peanut butter has 25% less fat than normal peanut butter, how much more of this peanut butter would I have to eat to get the same amount as fat as regular peanut butter?"
ONLY GENIUSES CAN FIGURE THIS ONE OUT
@JordiGH this is a pretty good trick question. Most people would assume that this is an excuse to use 25% more peanut butter, but the correct answer is obviously 33.(3)% more, so the follow up question is: did the kid some the problem correctly, or did they fall into the trap and consumer less than they could have?