As in the following figure of a quadrilateral; If the diagonals are stated to bisect each other, I thought this should hold (considering the bottommost triangle in blue lines); (veca +vecb)/2+(vecb −veca)/2=vecb But this shows that all quadrilaterals have their diagonals bisecting each other, since this gives vecb=vecb , which implies it's true for all veca and vecb . Which obviously isn't true. Where did my reasoning go wrong?,

Guabellok4

Guabellok4

Open question

2022-08-22

As in the following figure of a quadrilateral;

If the diagonals are stated to bisect each other, I thought this should hold (considering the bottommost triangle in blue lines);
a + b 2 + b a 2 = b
But this shows that all quadrilaterals have their diagonals bisecting each other, since this gives b = b , which implies it's true for all a and b . Which obviously isn't true.
Where did my reasoning go wrong?

Answer & Explanation

taldenmr

taldenmr

Beginner2022-08-23Added 6 answers

The upper right point is not a + b in general, if it is then we have a parallelogram, of which the diagonals bisect each other as you have proven.

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