Greek mathematics By: Ines Burazin Tomislav Haršanji Igor Sušić Matea Ugrica.

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Greek mathematics By: Ines Burazin Tomislav Haršanji Igor Sušić Matea Ugrica

Transcript of Greek mathematics By: Ines Burazin Tomislav Haršanji Igor Sušić Matea Ugrica.

Page 1: Greek mathematics By: Ines Burazin Tomislav Haršanji Igor Sušić Matea Ugrica.

Greek mathematics

By: Ines Burazin Tomislav Haršanji Igor Sušić Matea Ugrica

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Introduction:

• from the 7th century BC to the 4th century AD• around the shores of the Mediterranean• word "mathematics" – from the ancient

Greek μάθημα (mathema) = "subject of instruction“

• influences: Babylonian and Egyptian civilizations

• differences: respect of geometry and the idea of formal proof

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Introduction:

• achievements: ideas on number theorymathematical analysisapplied mathematicsapproached close to integral calculus

• two periods:Classical Hellenistic (4th century BC)

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Greek numeral system• known as Attic or Herodianic numerals• fully developed by about 450 BC• in regular use possibly as early as the 7th

Century BC• it is a base 10 system

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The Three Classical Problems

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Squaring the circle

It is the challenge of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle by using only a finite number of steps with compass and straightedge.

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Doubling the cube

• also known as the Delian problem• impossible to solve, because ≈ 1.25992105 is

not a constructible number

• double the size of the altar for Apollo, which was a regular cube

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The trisection of an angle

• involves the solving of a cubic equation

• something that cannot be done

• 90° can be trisected• a general angle cannot

(example 60°)

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Famous Greek Mathematicians

• THALES• PYTHAGORAS• ZENO OF ELEA• EUCLID• ARCHIMEDES• ERATOSTHENES

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Thales of Miletus

“The most difficult thing in life is to know yourself.”

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Thales of Miletus

• the first of the seven wise men of Greece• used geometry to solve problems such as

calculating the height of pyramids and the distance of ships from the shore

• first person known to have studied electricity• died at 78 in the 58th Olympiad (548–545)

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Propositions• A circle is bisected by any

diameter.• The base angles of an

isosceles triangle are equal.• The angles between two

intersecting straight lines are equal.

• Two triangles are congruent if they have two angles and the included side equal.

• An angle in a semicircle is a right angle.

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Pythagoras

“We ought so to behave to one another as to avoid

making enemies of our friends, and at the same time to make friends of

our enemies.”

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Pythagoras• called Pytha-goras

because the Pythian oracle predicted his birth

• known as “the father of numbers”

• Pythagoras and his students believed that everything was related to mathematics

• everything could be predicted and measured in rhythmic patterns or cycles.

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Figurate Numbers• Numbers geometrically

constructed had a particular importance to the Pythagoreans.

• Triangular numbers. These numbers are 1, 3, 6, 10, ... . The general form is the familiar 1+2+3+....+n=n(n+1)/2

• Square numbers These numbers are clearly the squares of the integers 1, 4, 9, 16, and so on. Represented by a square of dots

• the well known formula 1 + 3 + 5 + . . . + (2n − 1) = n2.

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Pythagorean spiral

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Zeno of Elea

• Zeno's paradoxes: "Achilles and the

Tortoise" "Arrow paradox"

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Zeno's paradoxes• paradoxes of Achilles and the Tortoise

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Euclid

“There is no royal road to geometry.”

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Euclid

• nobody knows much about Euclid's life anymore

• often referred to as the "Father of Geometry“

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Euclid• Five works by Euclid have survived to our day:• 1. The Elements - The Elements can be topically

divided into four sections:• Books I-VI — Plane geometry• Books VII-IX — Theory of Numbers• Book X — Incommensurables• Book XI-XIII — Solid Geometry

• 2. Data - includes geometric methods for the solution of quadratics.

• 3. Division of Figures• 4. Phaenomena - on spherical geometry,• 5. Optics

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Euclid’s theorem

• b² = a · m• c² = a · n

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Euclid

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Archimedes

“Eureka!”

“Give me the place to stand, and I shall move the earth.”

“Do not disturb my circles!”

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Archimedes

• from Syracuse• the most famous and

probably the best mathematician of antiquity

• made many discoveries in mathematics and physics

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The Golden Crown

• used his principle of buoyancy to determine whether the golden crown was less dense than solid gold

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The Burning Mirror (Glass)

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Eratosthenes

• born in Cyrene• invented the armillary

sphere

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Eratosthenes' other contributions include:

• The measurement of the Sun-Earth distance, now called the astronomical unit.

• The measurement of the distance to the Moon.

• The measurement of the inclination of the ecliptic with an angle error of 7'.

• He compiled a star catalogue containing 675 stars, which was not preserved.

• A map of the Nile's route as far as Khartoum.

• A map of the entire known world, from the British Isles to Ceylon, and from the Caspian Sea to Ethiopia.

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Thank you for your time!

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