At first glance, a looks like a flat, six-sided polygon with only two faces. However, through a series of "pinches" and folds, you can "flex" it to reveal entirely new surfaces.
Gardner’s work didn't stop at paper-folding; he famously explored how our intuition fails when faced with probability. These "paradoxes" show that the "obvious" answer is often mathematically impossible. History - Hexaflexagons - David Mitchell's Origami Heaven
The Paper Portal: Hexaflexagons and the Magic of Recreational Math
To mathematicians, these aren't just parlor tricks; they are a study in —the branch of math concerned with the properties of space that remain preserved under continuous deformation. A hexaflexagon is essentially a Möbius strip with extra twists, folded into a flat plane. Probability Paradoxes: When Logic Fails
: A more complex model with six faces, originally investigated by the "Flexagon Committee"—a group that included legendary physicist Richard Feynman and mathematician John Tukey .