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Methods
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Topic 4.
"Use What Is at Hand, and Don't Look for Anything Else".
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Lesson 1
Problem 16. [Problem
19 of the Guide Book] A foreign company used to buy
from another company sun-flower oil and transport it in the tanks with
capacity of 3000 liters.
It turned out that every time 20-30 liters
were missing in a tank. The measuring devices were checked they
were fine. The locks on the hatch, the hermetic seals were in order.
The fact that a few liters of oil could be left on the walls of the tank
was taken into consideration; but the loss was much bigger
An experienced
detective was invited. He couldnt find anything: the car didnt
stop anywhere and the driver didnt pump out the oil. The detective
gave up. ..
And at this point the Inventor appeared.
"Oh, whats the use of these detectives!",
he said. "Its all so simple. One has to think for a while."
Then he explained what the matter was. What
do you think?
One of the ways of obtaining ideal, the
most desired solution of a problem is using the most available resources.
The cheapest and most common resource, available to you all the time, is
emptiness (or "void"). How to use it? Lets imagine, for example,
a brick and try to improve it with the help of emptiness. First step:
we make a hole in the brick. The brick will become lighter, it will
need less material. Inside the walls of such a brick lines of communication
can be laid. Step two: well make a bigger hole in the brick.
The thin walls will make the brick fragile and breakable it will need
the hard edges. The brick with several holes becomes even lighter.
It can be used as a good heat-keeper and noise absorber. Such a brick
has also the drawbacks: it can not
be processed. A normal brick can be cut in two-three parts,
but if the one with the holes is being cut with a hammer, only fragments
will remain. Third step in the development of a brick: well make
many holes in a brick, but the holes are very small, to be precise, they
are bubbles. The weight of a brick is decreasing even more, heat
and noise isolation is increasing. How should a brick be treated
further? We may combine one big hole with the spongy structure of
a brick. Another step might be taken: instead of bubbles, thin holes
or capillaries. A brick illustrates unusual properties. A bath-room,
for example, built of such bricks, will be always dry.
(M. Rubin Converted emptiness,
newspaper Komsomolskoye znamya, July 12, 1991, Tambov.)
Problem 17.
[This problem is not cited in the Guide Book] Animals
often die under the car wheels at night, while crossing the road
To stop
the crossing by erecting a fence along the road is not a real thing.
How can we warn animals about an approaching car?
If ,
then (+) .,
but (--) ..must be ..,
in order to ..,
and must be not .,
in order to .................................................................................. by itself ............................................................
Solution:
__________________________________________________
Imagine the following situation: you are absolutely alone on an Uninhabited Island.
There were many plants, animals, etc. on Robinsons
island. Our island is not so rich, but we were lucky boxes full
of hats, many different hats, were washed ashore.
Our aim is to make our life on the island
comfortable. Use the hats as a resource.
Your drawings and explanations. |
CID
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Last updated on Sept. 11, 2001. Access point: Editor: nakagawa@utc.osaka-gu.ac.jp