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The Alexandrian School: EUCLID and Others

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Title: The Alexandrian School: EUCLID and Others


1
The Alexandrian School EUCLID and Others
  • MATH 4-5620
  • FALL 2004

2
Background
  • Alexander the Great (334-323B.C.)
  • City in Egypt still bears his name, Alexandria,
    had great harbor and docking facilities. Became
    the trading center of the world
  • After the demise of trading center (by Arabs),
    intellectual life, initiated by the early
    Ptolemies, prospered.

3
The Museum
  • Developed a center of learning called the
    Museum forerunner of modern university.
  • Leading scholars - scientists, poets, artists,
    writers - came to Alexandria by invitation from
    the Ptolemies.
  • Scholars had leisure to pursue their studies,
    access to finest libraries, and opportunity to
    talk to other resident experts.

4
Museum (cont.)
  • Members were granted salary stipends RB (at
    Kings expense)
  • Intended as an institution for research and
    learning rather than a place of education.
  • Science and mathematics flourished critical
    time span from 300-100 B.C. in the history of
    mathematics.
  • Alexandrian Library need for manuscripts said
    to have had 3-500,000 scrolls in time of Caesar

5
Distinguished Scholars
  • Euclid
  • Archimedes
  • Eratosthenes
  • Apollonius
  • Pappus
  • Claudius Ptolemy
  • Diophantus

6
EUCLID (323-285 B.C.)
  • Author of The Elements of Geometry
  • Author of at least 10 other works covering a wide
    variety of topics
  • Very little is known about his personal life he
    founded a school and taught in Alexandria is
    known but not much beyond that. Probable that he
    received his training from pupils of Plato (in
    Athens)

7
Take a look
  • Also refer to page 144 in text, which illustrates
    a page taken from the Latin version (1482)

8
The Elements
  • A compilation of the most important mathematical
    facts available at the time organized into 13
    books (6 were found.)
  • Much material was drawn from earlier sources.
  • The logical arrangement of theorems and
    development of proofs was evident.
  • Ranks with the Bible for circulation

9
Classics of Mathematics (Calinger, 1995)
  • Euclids fame
  • Outline of the Elements
  • Comment about the proofs of the propositions
    refer to p.122 for P.T.

10
Foundation of the Elements
  • Tried to build all of geometry on 5 postulates
    (self evident truths) and 5 axioms (later called
    common notions)
  • Refer to text p. 139 for postulates and p. 140
    for common notions.
  • Postulate 5 better known as the parallel
    postulate has been one of the most famous and
    controversial statements in math. history (How
    does one derive it from the first 4 postulates?)

11
Comments
  • Euclid tried to define all vocab. he used
  • Failed to recognize the necessity of undefined
    terms
  • Many proofs were based on reasoning from diagrams
    (which had visual evidence).
  • David Hilbert (1862-1943) German mathematician
    credited with work in foundations of Geometry.
  • http//babbage.clarku.edu/djoyce/hilbert/

12
Euclid and Number Theory
  • Three of the books (Elements) VII, VIII, and IX
    contained 102 propositions devoted to
    arithmetic (natural s or int.s).
  • Particular interest in divisibility and prime
    numbers.
  • Euclid always represented numbers by line segments

13
Euclidean algorithm
  • Based on the division theorem
  • aqbr 0ltrltb
  • Also known that for integers a and b, where a and
    b are non-zero, there exists integers x and y
    such that
  • gcd (a,b) axby

14
Fundamental Theoremof Arithmetic
  • Every positive integer ngt1 is either a prime or
    can be expressed as a product of primes this
    representation is unique, apart from the order in
    which the factors occur.
  • (proof text, p. 172)
  • i.e. 4725 33527

15
ERATOSTHENES(276-194 B.C.)
  • Refer to Classics of Mathematics (Calinger, 1995)
    for background on Eratosthenes.

16
Eratosthenes
  • His work included
  • 3-volume Geographica (put geographical studies on
    a sound mathematical basis)
  • As a mathematician, his chief work was a solution
    to the famous Delian problem of doubling the cube
    and the invention of a method for finding prime
    s.
  • Now best known for work in calculating the
    earths circumference (most accurate to this
    point)

17
Claudius PTOLEMY (85-160 A.D.) native of Egypt
  • Ptolemy did for astronomy what Euclid did for
    geometry reduced the work of his predecessors
    to a matter of historical interest
  • His great work was the Almagest (authority on
    astronomy until Copernicuss De Revolutionibus
    1543).

18
Ptolemy
  • He proposed eccentric solar motion
  • His system (described by the Almagest) was noted
    to be as complicated (relative to the time frame)
    as Einsteins relativity theory is to our time.
  • The chief flaw in Ptolemys system lay in its
    mistaken premise of an earth-centered universe
    (refer to text p. 182).

19
ARCHIMEDES (287-212 B.C.)
  • Considered the greatest genius of ancient times
  • Lived a generation or two after Euclid and was a
    contemporary of Eratosthenes
  • Son of an astronomer
  • Born in Syracuse - Greece

20
Archimedes
  • Earned great deal of notoriety by his
    mathematical writings, his mechanical inventions,
    and the method in which he conducted the defense
    of his native city during the second Punic War
    (218-201 B.C.)
  • One invention the Archimedean screw a pump
    still used in parts of the world raised canal
    water over levees into irrigated fields

21
Archimedes
  • Was much more interested in theoretical studies
    rather than applications
  • Of all of his achievements, he appeared to be
    most proud of his work contained in On the Sphere
    and Cylinder two books with about 53
    propositions. He indicated this work was for
    mathematicians to examine his proofs and judge
    their value (text, p. 190)

22
Archimedes
  • Another work, The Measurement of a Circle, is a
    short but important treatise. Contains three
    propositions (thought to be part of a longer
    work).
  • The most important proposition is the estimate of
    the numerical value of ? (ratio of circumference
    of a circle to its diameter). NOTE ? was not
    introduced until 1706 by an English writer
    (Wm.Jones)

23
Archimedes
  • The Sand-Reckoner, a computational accomplishment
    contained a new system of notation for expressing
    numbers in excess of one hundred million (for
    which Greek mathematics had not yet developed).
    He used exponents for ordering classes of
    magnitude.

24
Archimedes
  • On Spirals contains 28 propositions dealing with
    the properties of the curve now known as the
    spiral of Archimedes (text, p. 196).
  • One of the most interesting results was his
    calculation of the area enclosed by the first
    loop of the spiral and the fixed line.
  • Quadrature of a Parabola found the area of the
    segment formed by drawing any chord of a parabola.
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