GREEK MATHEMATICS
INTRODUCTION
   The beginnings of Greek mathematics
    originated from the 6th century BC to the
    5th century AD
   The word mathematics comes from the
    Greek word μάθημα (mathema),
    meaning "subject of instruction“
PERIODS IN GREEK MATHEMATICS
   FIRST – influenced by Pythagoras
   SECOND – Plato and his school
   THIRD – Alexandrian School flourished in
    Grecian Egypt and extended its
    influence to Sicily and Palestine
GREEK NUMBERS
   Greeks had a variety of different ways
    of writing down numbers
   Some Greeks used a system based on
    writing the first letter of the word for
    that number
   For number ten “Deka”, they would
    draw a D to mean 10. (a delta, in the
    Greek alphabet)
Some other numbers in greek symbols
   Because the Greeks had very clumsy
    ways of writing down numbers, they
    didn't like algebra
   They were more focused on
    geometry, and used geometric
    methods to solve problems that you
    might use algebra for
   They found it very hard to write down
    equations or number problems.
   Greek mathematicians were very
    interested in proving that certain
    mathematical ideas were true.
   They spent a lot of time using
    geometry to prove that things were
    always true,even thoughpeople like
    Egyptians and Babylonians already
    knew that they were true most of the
    time away.
   Because the Greeks had very clumsy
    ways of writing down numbers, they
    didn't like algebra
   They were more focused on
    geometry, and used geometric
    methods to solve problems that you
    might use algebra for
   They found it very hard to write down
    equations or number problems.
       MOST FAMOUS GREEK
        MATHEMATICIANS
   Thales          Aristotle
   Pythagoras      Hipocrates
   Anaxagoras      Euclid
   Democritus      Archimedes
THALES (grč.   Θαλής)
            Born 624. BC in
             Miletus
            the first of the
             Greeks who took
             any scientific
             interest in
             mathematics in
             general
            Improved Egyptian
             mathematics
                  THALES
   He knew many number relations
   In his work is the foundation of
    deductive geometry
   He is credited with a few of the simplest
    propositions relating to the plane figures
   His great contribution lay in suggesting a
    geometry of lines and in making the
    subject abstract
   He gave the idea of a logical proof as
    applied to geometry
PROPOSITION RELATING PLANE
          FIGURES
               a circle is bisected by its
                diameter,
               the angles at the bases
                of any isosceles triangle
                are equal
               if two straight lines cut
                one another, the
                opposite angles are
                equal.
               if two triangles have two
                angles and a side in
                common, the triangles
                are identical.
INTERCEPT THEOREM
   The ratios of any 2
    segments on the first
    line equals the ratios
    of the according
    segments on the
    second line
THALES THEOREM
                    If AC is a
                     diameter, then
                     the angle at B is
                     a right angle
PHYTAGORAS (grč. Πυθαγόρας)
               Born 570. BC in
                Samos
               Died 495. BC
               worked with
                abstract geometric
                objects and
                numbers
               gathered his school
                as a sort of
                mathematician
                secret brotherhood
PHYTAGORAS THEOREM
             in a right triangle,
              the sum of the
              squares of the two
              right-angle sides
              will always be the
              same as the
              square of the
              hypotenuse
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?
SQUARE NUMBERS
             These numbers are
              clearly the squares
              of the integers 1, 4,
              9, 16, and so on.
              Represented by a
              square of dots
PYTHAGORAS AND MUSIC
    musical notes could be
     translated into mathematical
     equations
DEMOCRITUS (grč. Δημόκριτος )
                   Born 460. BC, died
                    370.BC
                   Famous atomist
                   introduced the
                    idea of an infinite
                    number of points
                    that make up the
                    line
   He observed that a cone or pyramid has
    one-third the volume of a cylinder or
    prism respectively with the same base
    and height
   Plato (428 BC – 348 BC),
Philosopher, mathematician,
student of Socrates, writer of
philosophical dialogues, and
founder of the Academy in
Athens, the first institution of
higher learning in the Western
World.
Plato’s Cave Analogy
In Plato’s Divided Line, Mathematics falls under
the following category:
Highest form of true knowledge
Second highest form of true knowledge
A form of belief, but not true knowledge
A form of perception
ARISTOTLE (grč. Ἀριστοτέλης )
              Born 384. BC, died
               322. BC
              Greek philosopher,
               a student of Plato
               and teacher of
               Alexander the
               Great
   For him the base of
    mathematics is logic,
    but the nature of
    mathematical relations
    is completely specified
    by postulates that
    dictates the physical
    experience
HIPPOCRATES (grč. Ἱπποκράτης )
                    Lived from 460. BC
                     to 377. BC
                    an ancient Greek
                     physician and was
                     considered one of
                     the most
                     outstanding figures
                     in the history of
                     medicine
HIPPOCRATUS PROBLEM
              Heproved that
              the lune bounded
              by the arcs
              labeled E and F in
              the figure has the
              same area as
              does triangle ABO
        EUCLID (grč. Εὐκλείδης )
   Born 300. BC
   pioneer of axiomatics
    in geometry
   His work Elements
    fundamental work in
    the field of Greek
    mathematics
   influenced the
    development of
    mathematics in the
    next 20 centuries
ELEMENTS
 written about 300 B.C.
 textbook that includes number
  theory
 the Euclidean algorithm for finding
  the greatest common divisor of
  two numbers
   the first edition of the translation
    from Arabic into Latin 1482.
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.””
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.
Our world is non Euclidean
Restate the fifth postulate: Given a line and a point not on the line, it is possible to draw
exactly one line through the given point parallel to the line.
                                                 Spherical geometry is just as
                                                 real as Euclidean geometry, but
                                                 the theorems and general
                                                 results are very different. There
                                                 are quite a few results from
                                                 Euclidean geometry that are
                                                 completely false in spherical
                                                 geometry (and vice versa).
ARCHIMEDES (grč. Ἀρχιμήδης)
                  mathematician and
                   inventor born 287.
                   BC in Syracuse
                  founder of
                   quantitative physics
                  as a
                   mathematician,
                   advocate of logical
                   processes
   He determined approximate
    values of some irrational
    numbers
       1351/780>   >265/153
          28/7> π >223/71
   A sphere has 2/3 the
    volume and surface
    area of its
    circumscribing
    cylinder
   A sphere and cylinder
    were placed on the
    tomb of Archimedes
    at his request
LITERATURA
   Vladimir Devide: “Na izvorima
    matematike”
   Dadić Žarko: “Povijest ideja i metoda
    u matematici i fizici”; ŠK, 1992.
   http//www.ibilio.org/expo/vatican.ex
    hibit/exhibit/d-
    mathematics/Greek_math.html
   http://www.historyforkids.org
Authors:
     Ivana Pušić
     Dajana Rudić
     Ines Malić