This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revisionNext revisionBoth sides next revision | ||
cards:smith_myth [2013/03/29 12:08] – link and tag added denisbehr | cards:smith_myth [2014/12/09 23:12] – denisbehr | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== Smith Myth ====== | ====== Smith Myth ====== | ||
- | The mathematical principle behind the "Smith Myth," is now most commonly referred to as the Transposed Cards Principle. The foundation for this principle, which depends on the reversing of part or all of the deck, dates back to a card trick described in some of the earliest texts on conjuring secrets, such as the 1755 edition of Pablo Minguet' | + | The mathematical principle behind the "Smith Myth," is now most commonly referred to as the Transposed Cards Principle. The foundation for this principle, which depends on the reversing of part or all of the deck, dates back to a card trick described in some of the earliest texts on conjuring secrets, such as "Trick for Guessing the Card from a Deck that Someone Else Has Thought of" |
- | * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/show.php? | + | Professor Hoffmann, in //Modern Magic//, 1876, p. 52, provides two handlings of this trick in "To Allow a Person to Think of a Card, and To Make that Card Appear at Such Number in the Pack as Another Person Shall Name." A bit more modern application was given by Walter Gibson with "The Transposed Cards" in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/ |
+ | |||
+ | One of the most influential applications of the principle | ||
{{tag> | {{tag> |