Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, — And The T...

At first glance, a looks like a flat, six-sided polygon with only two faces. However, through a series of "pinches" and folds, you can "flex" it to reveal entirely new surfaces.

Gardner’s work didn't stop at paper-folding; he famously explored how our intuition fails when faced with probability. These "paradoxes" show that the "obvious" answer is often mathematically impossible. History - Hexaflexagons - David Mitchell's Origami Heaven Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, and the T...

In the autumn of 1939, a British graduate student named Arthur Stone was trimming American-sized paper to fit his European binder. Bored with the leftover strips, he began folding them into triangles. What he discovered wasn't just a toy, but a gateway into a world where paper behaves like a higher-dimensional object. This discovery eventually became the centerpiece of Martin Gardner’s first book , Hexaflexagons, Probability Paradoxes, and the Tower of Hanoi . The Hexaflexagon: More Than Meets the Eye At first glance, a looks like a flat,

: A more complex model with six faces, originally investigated by the "Flexagon Committee"—a group that included legendary physicist Richard Feynman and mathematician John Tukey . These "paradoxes" show that the "obvious" answer is