‘I hear some youngsters playing in the garden,’ said Jones, an actuarial student. ‘Are they all yours?’
‘Heavens, no,’ exclaimed Professor Smith, the eminent actuary… ‘My children are playing with friends from three other families in the neighbourhood, although our family happens to be the largest. The Browns have a smaller number of children, the Greens have a still smaller number, and the Blacks the smallest of all.‘
‘How many children are there altogether?‘ asked Jones.
‘Let me put it this way,’ said Smith. ‘There are fewer than 18 children, and the product of the numbers in the four families happens to be my house number which you saw when you arrived.’
Jones took a notebook and pencil from his pocket and started scribbling. A moment later he looked up and said, ‘I need more information. Is there more than one child in the Black family?‘
As soon as Smith replied, Jones smiled and correctly stated the number of children in each family. Knowing the house number and whether the Blacks had more than one child, Jones found the problem trivial.
It is a remarkable fact, however, that the number of children in each family can be determined solely on the basis of the information given above. So … can you work out how many children each family has ?