rrational numbers are fascinating and there is a legendary story behind them. Back in time, over two thousand five hundred years ago, there was this incredibly brilliant mathematician named Pythagoras. — Michael Lee
Much of everything we know about mathematics was developed by that school. — Michael Lee
Much of everything we know about mathematics was developed by that school. — Michael Lee
By the middle of the 1st Century BCE, the Roman had tightened their grip on the old Greek and Hellenistic empires, and the mathematical revolution of the Greeks ground to halt. Despite all their advances in other respects, no mathematical innovations occurred under the Roman Empire and Republic, and there were no mathematicians of note. The Romans had no use for pure mathematics, only for its practical applications, and the Christian regime that followed it (after Christianity became the official religion of the Roman empire) even less so. — storyofmathematics.com on Roman mathematics
It is not just a view, but a fact, that the study of mathematics in the so called "western" society almost grounded to a halt. There were further advancement in the Arabic and Indian cultures - most famously the use of the decimal system.There is this widespread view of a long mathematical winter between Greek antiquity and the 12th century AD, i.e. a millennium-long standstill
Whatever you do, don't tell Metaphysician Undercover. This information upsets him terribly. — fishfry
The next major advancement came during the Age of Enlightenment with the development of the calculus by Newton and Leibniz - but there were notable mathematicians even during those intervening years: Fibonacci, Fermat, etc... — Marlon
By the middle of the 1st Century BCE, the Roman had tightened their grip on the old Greek and Hellenistic empires, and the mathematical revolution of the Greeks ground to halt — storyofmathematics.com on Roman mathematics
Much of everything we know about mathematics was developed by that school. — Michael Lee
A bit of overstatement. But entertaining post — jgill
The Romans had no use for pure mathematics, — storyofmathematics.com on Roman mathematics
the soul that, by by error of heedlesssness, discovers or reveals anything of this nature that is in it or in this world, wanders thereafter to and fro in the sea of non-identity, immersed in the stream of becoming and decay, where there is no standard of measurement". — StreetlightX
I mean, it's a given that they have a decimal expansion e.g
pi = 3.14159...I suspect this involves some kind of division e.g . pi = circumference/diameter and that's a fraction isn't it? — TheMadFool
How did Archimedes calculate pi? I thought he used the method of exhaustion - increasing the number of sides of a polygon and doing the necessary division. — TheMadFool
Interestingly, that same method of inscribing or circumscribing polygons was used to prove some results in my integral calculus class. So there is a little truth to the hyperbole in the OP :) — SophistiCat
PI is indeed the ratio of the circumference divided by its diameter. But if you set the diameter equal to 1, and set the circumference to 3, you will underestimate its actual value of 3.14159... and if you set the circumference to 4, you will overestimate its actual value. To date, we have calculated it to well over 16 trillion digits and tried using many computer algorithms to try and find a pattern and nobody has been successful. I sometimes wonder why mathematicians bother in this silly endeavour. — Michael Lee
You have a point but what about other numbers like 22 and 7. In high school, ages ago, we were taught to use 22/7 for pi. — TheMadFool
The Indiana legislature once attempted to define pi as 3.2 — jgill
I don't see how it could cause problems; after all the Egyptian engineering didn't suffer from using pi = 3.1605. — TheMadFool
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