This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
mental:addition_test [2017/06/28 16:58] – external edit 127.0.0.1 | mental:addition_test [2024/04/18 02:35] (current) – Added subhead and Ash-Dusenberry citation. stephenminch | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== Addition Test ====== | ====== Addition Test ====== | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1787, the Italian conjurer, Signior Falconi, featured a prediction of "the Combination or Arrangements of four different Numbers" | ||
The earliest example of the Addition Test in print seems to be one by H. B. Wilton in //The Somatic Conjuror//, 1870, p. 32. The sum of three gentlemen' | The earliest example of the Addition Test in print seems to be one by H. B. Wilton in //The Somatic Conjuror//, 1870, p. 32. The sum of three gentlemen' | ||
+ | =====Later Developments===== | ||
Frank W. Thomas uses the idea as one component of a book test methodology in his " | Frank W. Thomas uses the idea as one component of a book test methodology in his " | ||
- | Another early example is "A Good Slate Trick" in Elbiquet' | + | In 1912, a conjurer named Mr. Ash, with the assistance of H. Syril Dusenberry, was reported to have performed an addition test for fellow magicians in San Francisco, with Dusenberry announcing the total remotely over a telephone before the addition was completed. See // |
+ | |||
+ | Another early example is "A Good Slate Trick" in Elbiquet' | ||
In // | In // | ||
- | The above research | + | The above is based in part on research provided by Max Maven. |
{{tag> | {{tag> |