ACW@MIT-AI 07/31/80 14:28:38 To: cube-lovers at MIT-MC Yeah, we have a prejudice against regarding 180-degree twists as atomic. I understand your feeling that a 180-degree twist is intuitively a single operation. Many of the cube-hackers at MIT became interested in the mathematical aspects of the cube, and the preference for counting quarter twists arose from this (admittedly rather Spartan) mathematical viewpoint. When the cube first appeared, the mathematicians among us instantly exclaimed, with great delight, "Wow, here we have a group, whose elements are possible manipulations of the cube, and whose binary operation consists of following one manipulation with another." We immediately got interested in group- theory questions like, "What is the order of this group?" "Does it have any interesting subgroups?" and, in general "What kind of object is this group? Does understanding it help us solve the cube better?" There are several common ways of representing groups. One is as a subgroup of a permutation group. This doesn't really help in the case of the Hungarian Cube, because it is too close to what the cube really is: few new facts or insights are revealed. Another way is with generators and relations. This means, to list a few basic group elements from which the whole group may be derived by multiplying them together. We soon figured out (along with hundreds of other mathematically-inclined cube-hackers) that the whole group of possible manipulations could be generated from six elements: the quarter-twists of each of the six faces. This observation later turned out to be crucial in calculating the order (number of possible states) of the group. Hence our predilection for counting quarter-turns. The half-turns were already accounted for, and we thought of them as two juxtaposed quarter-turns. I guess some of us believe that the mathematical structure of the cube group is built on quarter- turns. Those whose delight in the cube is not mathematical will not agree: after all, a half-twist is as easy as a quarter-twist to perform. But you will miss things like the fact that many useful manipulations are 8, 12, or 24 quarter-turns long. If you count half-turns, you get a whole spectrum of random move counts, thus missing some fundamental (and as yet little-understood) kinship between these manipulations. Of course, if you are not interested in such things, any measure of complexity (why not count equator twists? why not penalize for counter-clockwise twists, since they are marginally harder for right-handed people to do?) will suffice. ---Wechsler