Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC...

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Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy • Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre- Plato) • Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) • Period 3: 300 BC – 200 BC (Archimedes, Appolonius, Eratosthenes

Transcript of Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC...

Page 1: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013

Greek Mathematics and Philosophy

• Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato)• Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid)• Period 3: 300 BC – 200 BC (Archimedes,

Appolonius, Eratosthenes

Page 2: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Thales (624-547 BC): father of mathematical proof

Page 3: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

In the diagram, the ratio of the segments AD and DB is the same as the ratio of the segments AE and EC

A) TrueB) False

Page 4: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Pythagoras

• (c. 580-500 BC)

Page 5: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

In the diagram, the area of the square with side a plus the area of the square with side b equals the area of the square with side c

A)TrueB)False

Page 6: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Pythagorean philosophy

☺Transmigration of souls,☺purification rites; developed rules of living

believed would enable their soul to achieve a higher rank among the gods.

☺Theory that numbers constitute the true nature of things, including music

Page 7: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• The diatonic: ratio of highest to lowest pitch is 2:1,• produces the interval of an octave. • Octave in turn divided into fifth and fourth, with ratios 3:2

and 4:3 … • up a fifth + up a fourth = up an octave. • fifth … divided into three whole tones, each corresponding

to the ratio of 9:8 and a remainder with a ratio of 256:243 • fourth into two whole tones with same remainder. • harmony… combination… of … ratios of numbers• … whole cosmos … and individual do not arise by a chance

combinations … must be fitted together in a "pleasing" (harmonic) way in accordance with number for an order to arise.

C D E F G A B C

1 9/8 5/4 4/3 3/2 5/3 15/8 2

Page 8: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

π discovery that music was based on proportional intervals of numbers 1—4

π Believed the number system … and universe… based on their sum (10)

π … swore by the “Tetractys” rather than by the gods.

π Odd numbers were masculine and even were feminine.

π Hippasos …discovered irrational numbers…was executed.

π Hints of “heliocentric theory”

Page 9: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• "Bless us, divine number, thou who generated gods and men! O holy, holy Tetractys, thou that containest the root and source of the eternally flowing creation! For the divine number begins with the profound, pure unity until it comes to the holy four; then it begets the mother of all, the all-comprising, all-bounding, the first-born, the never-swerving, the never-tiring holy ten, the keyholder of all"

Page 10: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Clicker question

• The number 10 is a perfect number, that is, it is equal to the sum of all of the smaller whole numbers that divide into it.

• A) True• B) False

Page 11: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

۞ Pythagoreans … believed… when someone was "in doubt as to what he should say, he should always remain silent”

۞ …it was better to learn none of the truth about mathematics, God, and the universe at all than to learn a little without learning all

۞ Pythagoreans’ inner circle,“mathematikoi” ("mathematicians”); outer circle, “akousmatikoi” ("listeners”)

۞ … the akousmatikoi were the exoteric disciples who… listened to lectures that Pythagoras gave out loud from behind a veil.

۞ Pythagorean theory of numbers still debated among scholars.

۞ Pythagoras believed in "harmony of the spheres”… that the planets and stars moved according to mathematical equations, which corresponded to musical notes and thus produced a symphony

Page 12: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Music of the Spheres

Page 13: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 14: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• The square root of two is a rational number (the ratio of two whole numbers)

A)TrueB)False

Page 15: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

The Pythagorean Theorem

Page 16: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Which of the two diagrams provide “visual proof” of the Pythagoran theorem?

A) Left diagram onlyB) Right diagram onlyC) Both diagrams

Page 17: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Plato Plato (428 BC – 348 BC),

Page 18: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Plato’s Cave Analogy

Page 19: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 20: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• In Plato’s Divided Line, Mathematics falls under the following category:

A)Highest form of true knowledgeB)Second highest form of true knowledgeC)A form of belief, but not true knowledgeD)A form of perception

Page 21: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Plato (left) and Aristotle (right)

Page 22: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC)

• Aristotle’s logic: the syllogism• Major premise: All humans

are mortal.• Minor premise: Socrates is

a human.• Conclusion: Socrates is

mortal.

Page 23: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Epictetus and The Stoics (c 300 BC) Stoics believed … knowledge attained through use of reason… Truth

distinguishable from fallacy; *even if, in practice, only an approximation can be made.

• Modality (potentiality vs actuality).• Conditional statements. (if…then)• Meaning and truth

Page 24: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Euclid’s “Elements”arranged in order many of Eudoxus's theorems, perfected many of Theaetetus's, and brought to irrefutable demonstration theorems only loosely proved by his predecessorsPtolemy once asked him if there were a shorter way to study geometry than the Elements, …In his aim he was a Platonist, being in sympathy with this philosophy, whence he made the end of the whole "Elements" the construction of the so-called Platonic figures.

Page 25: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 26: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 27: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

The axiomatic method

• The Elements begins with definitions and five postulates.

• There are also axioms which Euclid calls 'common notions'. These are not specific geometrical properties but rather general assumptions which allow mathematics to proceed as a deductive science. For example:

“Things which are equal to the same thing are equal to each other.””

Page 28: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Euclid's PostulatesA straight line segment can be drawn joining any two points.2. Any straight line segment can be extended indefinitely in a straight line.3. Given any straight line segment, a circle can be drawn having the segment as radius and one endpoint as center.

4. All right angles are congruent.5. If two lines are drawn which intersect a third in such a way that the sum of the inner angles on one side is less than two right angles, then the two lines inevitably must intersect each other on that side if extended far enough. This postulate is equivalent to what is known as the parallel postulate.

Euclid's fifth postulate cannot be proven from others, though attempted by many people.Euclid used only 1—4 for the first 28 propositions of the Elements, but was forced to invoke the parallel postulate on the 29th.In 1823,Bolyai and Lobachevsky independently realized that entirely self-consistent "non-Euclidean geometries" could be created in which the parallel postulate did not hold.

Page 29: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Euclid's Postulates

1. A straight line segment can be drawn joining any two points.2. Any straight line segment can be extended indefinitely in a

straight line.3. Given any straight line segment, a circle can be drawn having

the segment as radius and one endpoint as center.4. All right angles are congruent.5. If two lines are drawn which intersect a third in such a way

that the sum of the inner angles on one side is less than two right angles, then the two lines inevitably must intersect each other on that side if extended far enough. This postulate is equivalent to what is known as the parallel postulate.

Page 30: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 31: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• Euclid's fifth postulate cannot be proven from others, though attempted by many people.

• Euclid used only 1—4 for the first 28 propositions of the Elements, but was forced to invoke the parallel postulate on the 29th.

• In 1823,Bolyai and Lobachevsky independently realized that entirely self-consistent "non-Euclidean geometries" could be created in which the parallel postulate did not hold.

Page 32: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Non-Euclidean geometries2

Non-Euclidean geometries 3

Non-Euclidean geometries 1

Page 33: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Clicker question

• Euclid’s fifth postulate, the “parallel postulate” can be proven to be a consequence of the other four postulates

• A) True• B) False

Page 34: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

ArchimedesPossibly the greatest mathematician ever;Theoretical and practical

Page 35: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 36: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Other cultures

• Avicenna (980-1037): propositional logic ~ risk analysis

• Parallels in India, China, • Medieval (1200-1600)• Occam (1288-1347)

Page 37: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Some practice problems

• If a=3 and b=4, what is the length c of the hypotenuse of the triangle?

3

4

c

Page 38: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• If a=5, b=4, c=3, d=3, and e=√5, find f.

3

4

f

a

c

b

de

Page 39: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• A ladder is 10 feet long. When the top of the ladder just touches the top a wall, the bottom of the ladder is 6 feet from the wall.

• How high is the wall?

Page 40: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

• TV screen size is measured diagonally across the screen. A widescreen TV has an aspect ratio of 16:9, meaning the ratio of its width to its height is 16/9. Suppose that a TV has a one inch boundary one each side of the screen. If Joe has a cabinet that is 34 inches wide, what is the largest size wide screen TV that he can fit in the cabinet?

Page 41: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Advanced

• The spherical law of cosines states that, on a spherical triangle. Cos (c/R) = (cos a/R) (cos b/R) + (sin a/R) (sin b/R) cos γ where R is the radius of the sphere. If the Earth’s radius is 6,371 km, find the distance from:

• from Seattle (48°N, 2°E) to Paris (48°N, 122°W) if traveling due east?

• from Lincoln, NE (40°N, 96°W) to Sydney, Australia (34°S, 151°E).

Page 42: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Each of the following pictures provide a scheme to prove the

Pythagorean theorem. In ach case, explain how the proof follows from

the picture.

Page 43: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 44: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 45: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 46: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 47: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.
Page 48: Lecture 4, MATH 210G.03, Spring 2013 Greek Mathematics and Philosophy Period 1: 650 BC-400 BC (pre-Plato) Period 2: 400 BC – 300 BC (Plato, Euclid) Period.

Explain the figure using the Pythagorean theorem