[2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

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Expand view Topic review: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by hamjudo » Fri Nov 07, 2014 9:38 pm

Mrs. Wolverine used the phrase real wages. Which usually means wages adjusted for inflation. For the sake of the joke, I am assuming they live in an area where the price of roses has changed in step with inflation.

Just like Dev Null, I like cartoons where the math works.

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by n » Thu Nov 06, 2014 11:59 am

when you judge love by income you should take into account the nominal price of roses.
this was not mentioned in Mrs Wolverine's argument which is therefore false.

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by Guest » Thu Nov 06, 2014 12:42 am

Good job! The 6 roses sealed the punchline. This one was legitimately funny.

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by unkz » Wed Nov 05, 2014 11:38 pm

Kaitlyn wrote:I think the real tragedy here is that they've been dating for 20 years.
Because you think marriage should be an end goal or for some other reason?

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by unkz » Wed Nov 05, 2014 8:52 pm

Guest wrote:I'm pretty sure that's (100/102)^20, but given that the 2% is an approximation, I guess 0.98^20 is close enough.
Either way -- 1/(1.01^20) = 0.67297... and 0.98^20 = 0.66760... both round to 0.67. Still works like that at 60 years, in fact (0.29755... vs 0.30478...).

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by slick514 » Wed Nov 05, 2014 7:04 pm

EdgarTheGreat wrote:
slick514 wrote:Roses are a commodity, not currency. Assuming that demand for roses remains constant, we would expect the value of each rose to increase more or less at pace with inflation. Your comic strip is invalid.
Gold acts both as a commodity and a currency. Who's to say that the same isn't true for roses in some alternate universe
Let us assume that roses act as currency in this alternate universe. Hyperinflation would undoubtably be the norm for as long as there is still unplanted arable land where more money-plants could be added... In this case, I don't know why he would be speaking to this woman, seeing as how the amount of affection that he holds for her is vanishingly small...

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by Guest » Wed Nov 05, 2014 5:49 pm

I'm pretty sure that's (100/102)^20, but given that the 2% is an approximation, I guess 0.98^20 is close enough.

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by Kaitlyn » Wed Nov 05, 2014 4:51 pm

I think the real tragedy here is that they've been dating for 20 years.

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by EdgarTheGreat » Wed Nov 05, 2014 4:41 pm

slick514 wrote:Roses are a commodity, not currency. Assuming that demand for roses remains constant, we would expect the value of each rose to increase more or less at pace with inflation. Your comic strip is invalid.
Gold acts both as a commodity and a currency. Who's to say that the same isn't true for roses in some alternate universe

Re: [2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by slick514 » Wed Nov 05, 2014 4:01 pm

Roses are a commodity, not currency. Assuming that demand for roses remains constant, we would expect the value of each rose to increase more or less at pace with inflation. Your comic strip is invalid.

[2014-11-05] How Do I Love Thee?

by Dev Null » Wed Nov 05, 2014 3:25 pm

Let me count the ways...

http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=3534

I love that the math works; Sheila gets 33% (6) of his expanded 18-rose heart.

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