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Comments on How can a problem or puzzle be analogized as a knot?

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How can a problem or puzzle be analogized as a knot?

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An ESL student was asking about the quotation below at my school, but I don't know how to expound or simplify to her that "A problem or puzzle can be thought of as a knot." Any ideas? She knows what a knot is, but somehow she can't connect the dots between a knot and a problem.

The Latin roots solv and its variant solut both mean “loosen.” Let’s absolutely resolve these roots right now in a resolute fashion!

Let’s begin with the root solv, which means “loosen.” A problem or puzzle can be thought of as a knot. When you solve a problem, you “loosen” or untie that knot. When you show resolve in doing so, you are determined to “loosen” that knot no matter what. Once you resolve or set the task to “loosen” the puzzle, you can absolve or “loosen” yourself from this responsibility by using willpower to complete it.

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Jirka Hanika‭ wrote almost 4 years ago

Are you that "ESL student" yourself? If not, you could improve the question by elaborating what you have tried. Specifically, you could edit to add what connections between problem solving and its special case of knot untying/cutting you are already aware of, what made it difficult to share your ideas with the "ESL student", and if you are implying that she is fluent in languages other than English, which languages are those.

PSTH‭ wrote almost 4 years ago

@JirkaHanika Hello again! Not this time! I can relate to knots as problems for me personally, because I'm bad at untying knots. Her native language is Russian, I think.