history of math t. 1 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
When was Babylonian mathematics? | 1800-1600 BC |
Babylonian number system | base 60 or sexagesimal |
How the Babylonians treated division | as multiplication by a reciprocal a/b=a(1/b) |
Where does our knowledge of Egyptian mathematics come from? | Rhind Papyrus and Moscow Papyrus |
When Rhind Papyrus was written? | 1650 BC by scribe Ahmes copying from earlier version from 1800 BC |
Origin of Geometry in Egypt | rooted in measuring land gained or lost in the yearly flooding of the Nile (geo=earth, metre=measure) |
Rhind papyrus | shows Egyptian techniques of multiplying and dividing, using addition and doubling, all problems are numerical and many are practical |
Unit fractions | how the Egyptians thought of fractions where the numerator was greater than 1, but the denominators could not be the same |
Rhind papyrus #28 | earliest “think of a number” problem |
Rhind papyrus #79 | old riddle if I have 7 horses that each have 7 cats, etc. |
Correct Egyptian geometry | area of isosceles triangle and trapezoid formulas |
Incorrect Egyptian geometry | area formulas for a quadrilateral and circle |
Rhind papyrus #14 | the correct formula for the volume of a truncated square pyramid, Herodotus claimed that the Great Pyramid led to the golden ratio |
Plimpton 322 | clay tablet dating to 1900-1600 BC from Babylonians, proof they knew the Pythagorean theorem before Greeks |
Cairo Mathematical Papyrus | 300 BC in Egypt also has problems with the Pythagorean Theorem |
Beginning of Greek mathematics | about 700-600 BC |
Thales | (622-547 BC) first mathematician, first of 7 Sages of Greece, Father of Geometry, coined “Know thyself”, first to use logical proofs, 6 geometric propositions |
Thales stories | claims he measured height of the Great Pyramid by measuring shadows and using similar triangles, measured distance from a ship to show, some say he was Pythagoras’s teacher |
Pythagoras | (585-501 BC) founded a school for political, philosophical, and religious teaching in southern Italy, married student Theano |
Pythagoras’s 4 mathemata | arithmetica(number theory), harmonia (music), geometria(geometry), astrologia (astronomy) |
Pythagoraean secret society | communal lifestyle, symbols- 5 pointed star and 10 dots in a triangle, mathematics/philosophy way of life/religion, “everything is number”, |
Pythagoras’s mathematics and philosophy | that which we learned and love of wisdom |
Nichomachus | about 100 AD, wrote “Introductio Arithmeticae” that tells what we know of Pythagorean number theory |
Pythagorean numbers | had no digits, but arranged dots into shapes to represent numbers ex. Triangular numbers, square numbers |
Gauss | (1777-1855) discovered formula for summing numbers like n(n+1)/2= 1+2+3+…+n |
Zeno | (450 BC) member of Eleatic school in southern Italy, believed time and space are continua, undivided wholes, had 4 paradoxes related to this |
Pythagorean theorem proofs | Chinese(600 BC), same as given by Bhaskara (1114 AD) in India, Euclid’s is simpler (323-285 BC) |
Formula for Pythagorean triples | Fibonacci (1175-1250) x=2mn, y=m^2-n^2, z= m^2+n^2, used by both Euclid and Diophantus |
Irrational numbers | alien to Pythagoreans and were forbidden to be discussed, beginning of proof by contradiction, not proved until 1872 by Dedekind |
Plato’s mathematics | could only use a straight edge and compass, |
3 problems that couldn’t be solved with straight edge and compass | quadrature of a circle, duplicating the cube, trisecting a general angle |
Quadratrix | curve invented by Hippias(460 BC) to trisect an angle, used by Dinostratus to square a circle, first curve drawn by plotting points |
Sophist | tutored for a fee, not just in academics but in powers of persuasion ex. Hippias and Hippocrates |
The Academy | opened by Socrates’s student Plato(429-348 BC), center of learning in Greece for 900 yrs, valued logical training of mathematics |
Museum | 300 BC founded by Ptolemy I in Alexandria, Egypt, primarily a research institute |
Hellenistic age | Greek-like age, 200 years after Museum founded, Euclid was here |
Euclid | (328-285 BC) author of the “Elements of Geometry”, not all original, but gave a logical arrangement of theorems and proofs, based on definitions and assumptions (postulates and axioms) |
Number of axioms and propositions | 10 axioms and 465 propositions |
Proposition 4 | proves the side-angle-side theorem of congruence |
Proposition 5 | an isosceles triangle has congruent base angles |
Proposition 16 | the exterior angle theorem, assumes that a line has infinite proof |
Proposition 29 | first proof using parallel postulate, a line crossing 2 parallel lines, the alternate interior angles are equal, the corresponding angles equal, & interior angles on the same side sum to 2 right angles |
Proposition 31 | a perpendicular from the vertex of a right angle divides a triangle into 2 similar triangles |
Elements | studies the arithmetic of natural numbers |
Primes | Euclid proved theorem that there are infinitely many primes |
Euclidean algorithm | gcd(a,b)=ax+by denotes the greatest common divisor |
Fundamental theorem of arithmetic | every positive integer can be written uniquely as a product of primes |
Eratosthenes | (276-194 BC) Greek scholar studying in Alexandria, chief librarian at Museum, liked Geography and math, calculated Earth’s circumference |
Mesolabium | made by Eratosthenes, used to duplicate the cube, used similar triangles to find the mean proportional of duplicating the cube |
Sieve of Eratosthenes | means of finding all primes less than integer n, list all numbers less than n and strike out muliples of primes <= sqrt(n) |
Claudius Ptolemy | (100-170 AD) wrote Almagest where he described an earth-centered system of planetary motion, divided a spherical globe into 360 degrees with meridians and parallels |
Apollonius | described motion in circles, not ellipses, and epicycles explained deviations |
Archimedes | (287-212 BC) lived in Syracuse, Sicily, engineer, invented Archimedian screw to pump water, used levers and pulleys to protect country, killed by Roman soldier |
Archimedes’s discoveries | volume of a sphere is 2/3 volume of the surrounding cylinder |
Archimedes’s pi | 22/7 or 3.1429, found using method of exhaustion |
Method of exhaustion | areas of inscribed and circumscribed polygons of an increasing number of sides are calculated |
-pi symbol was introduced in 1706 | |
Lin Hui | found the value for pi to be 3.14159 in 3rd century AD |
Arybhata | found estimate of 3.1416 in 5th century AD in India |
Ludolph Van Ceulen | (1540-1610) found pi to 35 places |
Spiral of Archimedes | in polar form it is r=aӨ and successfully calculated its area from 0 to 2π using exhaustion, used spiral to trisect an angle and square the circle |
Created by:
lfalkens
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