Photo AI
Question 7
Explain what is wrong with the student's "proof". A student notices that when he adds two consecutive odd numbers together the answer always seems to be the differe... show full transcript
Step 1
Answer
The student's proof only checks specific examples (3 + 5, 5 + 7, and 7 + 9) and claims that since these cases work, it must be true for all consecutive odd numbers. This is a common logical fallacy known as 'cherry-picking,' where one cannot generalize a conclusion based solely on limited examples.
Step 2
Answer
The proof does not provide an algebraic justification for why the sum of two consecutive odd numbers is always the difference of two square numbers. A true proof should demonstrate the conclusion for all integers, not just a select few. Without a general case set up algebraically, the proof lacks rigor.
Report Improved Results
Recommend to friends
Students Supported
Questions answered