Today:
- Announcements
- Homework through section 3.2 due.
- Some beautiful "behold proofs" of a few infinite series
- Next time: we may well have a visit from Frank Morgan.
- I've not prepared a worksheet for 4.3. It's a collection of number
theoretic results, and we'll pick some of the greatest hits (e.g. the
infinitude of primes, Euclid's division algorithm) to concentrate
on. Homework: problems pp. 184, #1, 6, 10, 15, 18, 20, 26.
- Today:
- Lessons from 4.2
- Commercial (Paul or Debra?) for Wednesday; the other for next
time.
- More Lessons from 4.2
- Mathematical Elements, lessons and problems from section 4.2: "Here's lookin' at Euclid"
- Robin Wilson in "Lewis Carroll in Numberland"
-
- Lewis Carroll liked to have fun in all things:
- "If AB were to be divided into two parts at C..."
"It would be drownded."
- Sorry if I offended anyone with my editorial comment about
"Our educational system": but I too find that "... studies may
be made so easy and mechanical as to render thought almost
superfluous." I hope that our course is not so!
- The Euclid Debate: "De Morgan raised the question whether
Euclid be, as many suppose, the best elementary treatise on
geometry, or whether it be a mockery, delusion, snare,
hindrance, pitfall, shoal, shallow, and snake in the grass." --
An Anti-Euclid Association was formed....
- What's Dodgson's point in the Minos sketch on page 93?
- What do you think of Dodgson's alternative postulate to
the parallel postulate (p. 98)?
- How about his approach to attacking circle squarers?
- Another resource for Euclid's propositions and proofs
- Euclid's Elements
- "Proclus ... speaks of all of mathematics as hypothetical;
that is, it merely deduces what must follow from the
assumptions, whether or not the latter are true." p. 59. This
is a very mature mathematical attitude. Proclus (8 February 412
- 17 April 485 AD) is the one who provides us our single
element of information about Euclid's life -- about 750 years
after the fact! What could you tell with any confidence about
those who lived in 1250 AD?
- Book I -- Elementary Plane Geometry
- Book II: Geometric Algebra
- In which equations are solved by geometric construction
- The golden section (p. 166). Our author's construction is
much nicer than that found in Book
II, Proposition 11
- Construction of regular n-gons
- Greeks resolved their fear of "the unutterable" by
identifying irrational numbers with geometric quantities ("Main
theme of the section" (p. 169))
Website maintained by Andy Long.
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