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Pythagoras and the Pythagorean Theorem Made By Christine Gerwig

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Pythagoras and the Pythagorean Theorem. Made By Christine Gerwig. Pythagoras. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

Pythagoras and the Pythagorean Theorem

Made By Christine Gerwig

Page 2: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasPythagoras, a Greek philosopher, was

born around 570 BCE in Samos, near modern Turkey. When he was around 18, he left to Phoenicia, Egypt, and possibly Babylonia (to study), and Croton (or Kroton) in Italy to escape the rule of the tyrant, Polycrates.

He died around 490 BCE in another southern Italian city named Metapontion.

Page 3: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasWhile in Croton, he established a society made of ‘Pythagoreans.’ The main idea of the Pythagorean philosophy is that there are three kinds of men: (from lowest to highest) those who buy and sell (lovers of wisdom), those who compete (lovers of honor), and those who simply watch (lovers of gain). This expresses the belief of the tripartite soul, the belief that every soul has three parts.

Page 4: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasPythagoras also taught about Rebirth, if

the soul, a divine and immortal being, was purified from being in contact with the material body by the individual’s conduct and observance of rules.

Page 5: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasAlthough not much is known about Pythagoras, it is fairly certain that he experimented the relationships between mathematics and music, as he also wanted to further explore the relationship between the physical world and mathematics. For example, he attached different weights to strings or used different string lengths, and examined the weights on the strings or the string lengths and the note they produced. He discovered that a string and another string twice its length produced harmonious tones, which led to musical scales and octaves. This also began the science of mathematical physics, where a physical law is mathematically expressed.

Page 6: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasPythagoras and his followers were also some of the first to imagine the world as a sphere, for it created a ‘perfect’ mathematical interrelation between a globe moving in circles and the stars’ behavior in a spherical universe. This was more pleasing that Anaximander’s cylindrical earth or a flat one, and later caused Greek scholars, such as Aristotle, to seek and find evidence to support the idea of a spherical Earth.

Page 7: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasPythagoras also believed that the Sun,

Moon, and planets all move independently. His successors developed the idea of the Earth revolving around a central fire. This eventually led to the Copernican theory of the universe.

Page 8: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasSome other beliefs of the Pythagoreans were:

o To abstain from beanso Not to pick up what has falleno Not to touch a white cocko Not to stir a fire with irono Not to look in a mirror beside a

lighto Not to pick breado Not to step over a crossbaro Not to eat from the whole loaf

o Not to walk on highwayso To regard men and women

equallyo To enjoy a common way of lifeo To live communally o Discoveries were communal

and all were attributed to Pythagoras

o The number is the essence of all things (virtues, colors)

Page 9: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

PythagorasSome other disciplines of the Pythagoreans were:

o Silenceo Musico Incenseso Physical and moral

purificationso Rigid cleanlinesso A mild asceticism

o Utter loyaltyo Common possessionso Secrecyo Daily self-examinationso Pure linen clothes

Page 10: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

Pythagoras The Pythagoreans were finally

destroyed in the 400’s BCE by the people of Croton. The people were suspicious of the Pythagoreans because they were aristocrats, so they killed the Pythagoreans in a political uprising.

Page 11: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

The Pythagorean Theorem The Pythagorean Theorem was one of

the theorems known earliest to ancient civilizations. 1000 years before Pythagoras, clay tablets from Babylonia had rules for creating Pythagorean Triplets, and showed that the Babylonians had some knowledge on the relationships between the sides of a right triangle, and had even come up with an estimation for the square root of 2.

Page 12: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

The Pythagorean TheoremThe Chao Pei Suan

Page 13: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

The Pythagorean TheoremThe Pythagorean Theorem is most likely

only named after Pythagoras because he was probably the first to offer a proof of the theorem. However, since he was credited for the Pythagoreans’ discoveries, it might have been one of the Pythagoreans who discovered the proof.

Page 14: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

Bibliography• http://easybib.com/

• http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pythagoras/• http://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/pythagor.htm• http://www.iep.utm.edu/pythagor/• http://www.dartmouth.edu/~matc/math5.geometry/unit3/unit3.html• http://www.math.tamu.edu/~dallen/history/pythag/pythag.html• http://www.personal.kent.edu/~rmuhamma/Philosophy/PhiloHistory/pythagoras.htm• http://www.wsu.edu/~delahoyd/pythagoras.html• http://faculty.evansville.edu/tb2/trip/pythagoras.htm• http://home.wlu.edu/~mahonj/ancient_philosophers/pythagoras.htm• http://abyss.uoregon.edu/~js/glossary/pythagoras.html• http://www.math.wichita.edu/history/men/pythagoras.html

• http://www.age-of-the-sage.org/human_nature_tripartite_soul.html

• http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12587b.htm• http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Pythagoras/• http://9waysmysteryschool.tripod.com/sacredsoundtools/id13.html• http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/science/math/pythagoras.htm

Page 15: Pythagoras and the  Pythagorean Theorem

• http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emt669/student.folders/morris.stephanie/emt.669/essay.1/pythagorean.html• http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emt668/emt668.student.folders/headangela/essay1/pythagorean.html• http://www.geom.uiuc.edu/~demo5337/Group3/hist.html• http://ualr.edu/lasmoller/pythag.html• http://www.clarku.edu/~djoyce/trig/geometry.html• http://www.math.odu.edu/~jhh/p65to72.PDF• http://www.math.ucla.edu/mcpt/04-MCPT_Pyth_Participant.pdf• http://www.math.ucla.edu/mcpt/03-MCPT-Pyth_Instructors.pdf• http://blossoms.mit.edu/video/pythagorean/pythagorean-overview.pdf• http://www.math.psu.edu/levi/Welcome_files/Sample.pdf• http://www.astro.washington.edu/courses/labs/clearinghouse/labs/distform.html

• http://www.usna.edu/MathDept/mdm/pyth.html• http://oneweb.utc.edu/~Christopher-Mawata/geom/geom6.htm• http://persweb.wabash.edu/facstaff/footer/Pythagoras.htm• http://people.wku.edu/tom.richmond/Pythag.html