History of Early Geometry

29
Millau Bridge Sir Norman Foster Point, Lines, Planes, Angles Fallingwaters Frank Lloyd Wright Millenium Park Frank Lloyd Wright History of Early Geometry

description

Brief History Of Early Geometry for High School Math

Transcript of History of Early Geometry

Page 1: History of Early Geometry

Millau BridgeSir Norman Foster

Point, Lines, Planes, Angles

FallingwatersFrank Lloyd Wright

Millenium ParkFrank Lloyd Wright

History of Early Geometry

Page 2: History of Early Geometry

GeometryThe word "geometry " comes from two Greek words

geo and metron meaning "earth measuring."Geometry was extremely important to ancient societies and was used for surveying, astronomy, navigation, and building. Geometry, as we know it is actually known as Euclidean geometry which was written well over 2000 years ago in

Ancient Greece by Euclid, Pythagoras, Thales, Plato and Aristotle just to mention a few. The most fascinating and accurate geometry text was written by Euclid,

and was called Elements. Euclid's text has been used for over 2000 years!

Page 4: History of Early Geometry

Where These People Lived

To understand the history, you need to know the locations of the places being discussed.

Geography and geometry have a lot in common.

Let’s look at that section of the world.

Page 5: History of Early Geometry

Mediterranean

Page 6: History of Early Geometry

ThalesThales of Miletus (624-547 BC)was one of the Seven pre-Socratic Sages, and brought the science of geometry from Egypt to Greece. He is credited with the experimental discovery of  five facts of elementary geometry (including that an angle in a semicircle is a right angle), but some historians dispute this and give the credit to Pythagoras.

Page 7: History of Early Geometry

Miletas

Situated at the mouth of the Meander in the south of the province of Ionia in Western Anatolia, the ancient city of Miletus was the oldest and the most powerful of the twelve Ionian cities in Asia Minor. It also founded over ten colonies on the shores of the Marmara and the Black Sea, while its commercial activities extended as far as Egypt. Its schools made a very great contribution to the intellectual and scholarly development of the Mediterranean world and one cannot talk of Miletus without mention of the great contributions to geometry and science made by Thales, one of the greatest scholars produced

by the city.

BlackSea

Page 8: History of Early Geometry

Thales of Miletus

"The skillful man is superior to the strong man."

"Don't come to a conclusion before listening to both sides.“

"A small spark is enough to burn down a whole forest."

Page 9: History of Early Geometry

PythagorasPythagoras of Samos (569-475 BC)is regarded as the first pure mathematician to logically deduce geometric facts from basic principles. He is credited with proving many theorems such as the angles of a triangle summing to 180 deg, and the infamous "Pythagorean Theorem" for a right-angled triangle (which had been known experimentally in Egypt for over 1000 years). The Pythagorean school is considered as the (first documented) source of logic and deductive thought, and may be regarded as the birthplace of reason itself. As philosophers, they speculated about the structure and nature of the universe: matter, music, numbers, and geometry.

Page 10: History of Early Geometry

Note that Samos is much closer to Turkey than Greece.

Page 11: History of Early Geometry

Samos

Greek Island

Page 12: History of Early Geometry

Fishing and resort island.

Page 13: History of Early Geometry

HippocratesHippocrates of Chios (470-410 BC)wrote the first "Elements of Geometry" which Euclid may have used as a model for his own Books I and II more than a hundred years later. In this first "Elements", Hippocrates included geometric solutions to quadratic equations and early methods of integration. He studied the classic problem of squaring the circle showing how to square a "line". He worked on duplicating the cube which he showed equivalent to constructing two mean proportionals between a number and its double. Hippocrates was also the first to show that the ratio of the areas of two circles was equal to the ratio of the squares of their radii.

Page 14: History of Early Geometry

Chios

Note that Chios is closer to Turkey than Greece.

Page 15: History of Early Geometry

Chios

Page 16: History of Early Geometry

PlatoPlato (427-347 BC)

founded "The Academy" in 387 BC which flourished until 529 AD. He developed a theory of Forms, in his book "Phaedo", which considers mathematical objects as perfect forms (such as a line having length but no breadth). He emphasized the idea of 'proof' and insisted on accurate definitions and clear hypotheses, paving the way to Euclid, but he made no major mathematical discoveries himself. The state of mathematical knowledge in Plato's time is reconstructed in the scholarly book:  The Mathematics of Plato's Academy .

Page 17: History of Early Geometry
Page 18: History of Early Geometry

Athens

The Parthanon

Page 19: History of Early Geometry

EuclidEuclid of Alexandria (325-265 BC)is best known for his 13 Book treatise "The Elements" (~300 BC), collecting the theorems of Pythagoras, Hippocrates, Theaetetus, Eudoxus and other predecessors into a logically connected whole. A good modern translation of this historic work is The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements by Thomas Heath.

Page 20: History of Early Geometry
Page 21: History of Early Geometry

Euclid QuoteWhen Pharaoh Ptolemy the ruler of Egypt said he wanted to learn geometry, Euclid explained that the Pharaoh would have to study long hours and memorize the contents of a fat book. Ptolemy complained that it would be unseemly and demanded a short cut.

Euclid replied, “There is no royal road to geometry.”

There wasn’t a shortcut to the learning process then and there still isn’t one.

Homework needs to be done EVERY day.

Page 22: History of Early Geometry

Euclid Quote A youth who had begun to read geometry with Euclid, when he had learnt the first proposition, he inquired, "What do I get by learning these things?" So Euclid called a slave and said "Give him three pence, since he must make a gain out of what he learns."

 “The laws of nature are but the mathematical thoughts of God.”

Page 23: History of Early Geometry

Archimedes

Archimedes of Syracuse (287-212 BC)is regarded as the greatest of Greek mathematicians, and was also an inventor of many mechanical devices (including the screw, the pulley, and the lever). He perfected integration using Eudoxus' method of exhaustion, and found the areas and volumes of many objects. A famous result of his is that the volume of a sphere is two-thirds the volume of its circumscribed cylinder, a picture of which was inscribed on his tomb. He gave accurate approximations to pi and square roots. BC.

The father of mechanics.

Page 24: History of Early Geometry

Archimedes

In his treatise "On Plane Equilibriums", he set out the fundamental principles of mechanics, using the methods of geometry, and proved many fundamental theorems concerning the center of gravity of plane figures. He discovered the 13 semi-regular (or "Archimedian") polyhedra whose faces are all regular polygons. Translations of his surviving manuscripts are now available as The Works of Archimedes. A good biography of his life and discoveries is also available in the book Archimedes: What Did He Do Beside Cry Eureka?. 

He was killed in Carthage by a Roman soldier 212 BC.

Page 25: History of Early Geometry

Syracuse: Greece?

Page 26: History of Early Geometry

Greek Colony of Syracuse

Page 27: History of Early Geometry

What did one acorn say to another acorn?

Gee I’m a tree.

Groan?

Page 28: History of Early Geometry

1. Note that Geometry was not invented by the Greeks.Euclid, the father of Geometry, did not discover it all. Much work was done prior to him by Egyptians.

Summary

2. The three top ancient geometers were Pythagoras, Euclid, and Archimedes

3. Geometry means measure the earth.

Page 29: History of Early Geometry

C’est fini.