This is a relatively simple problem from the inventive Raymond Smullyan in the “Brain Bogglers” section of the 1996 Discover magazine.
“AL THE CHEMIST—not an alchemist, though his name might suggest it—one day partially filled a container with some concoction or other. He knew the volume of fluid in the container, as well as the volume of empty space, and realized that two-thirds of the former was equal to four-fifths of the latter. Was the container then less than half full, more than half full, or exactly half full?”
See Al the Chemist I for solution.

This is a nice variation on a racing problem by Geoffrey Mott-Smith from 1954.
The June 2023
The Futility Closet website had the following
Here is another problem from the “Challenges” section of the Quantum magazine.
This is a classic example of a mixture problem from Dan Griller that recalls my agonies of beginning algebra.
This is a nice puzzle from the Maths Masters team, Burkard Polster (aka Mathologer) and Marty Ross as part of their “Summer Quizzes” offerings.
This is a nifty
This is a Catriona Agg problem presented by itself, since it turned out to be the most challenging one I ever tried. Usually I can solve her problems in a few minutes or maybe hours, or sometimes days if they are especially challenging. But this problem has taken me weeks and I had to rely on a non-geometric argument. The problem is full of fascinating and unexpected relationships, but I couldn’t find a way to use them to prove the answer.
This is a straight-forward problem from Five Hundred Mathematical Challenges.