History of Math Treshalyn
History of Math Treshalyn
History of Math Treshalyn
HISTORY OF MATH
Proof, Certainty,
and Techonoly
PRESENTED BY:
Treshalyn D. Hernandez
THE HISTORY AND CONCEPT OF MATHEMATICAL PROOF
A mathematician is
the master of critical
thinking, of analysis, and
of deductive reasoning.
The unique features of mathematics apart from any other
sciences, from philosophy, and any other intellectual discourse, is
the use of rigorous “proof”.
It is the proof concept that makes the subject cohere, that gives its
timelessness, that enables it to travel well.
SURVEYING LAND
Egyptians as well as Greeks, were concerned about surveying
land. Thus it was natural to consider questions of geometry
and trigonometry.
Certainly triangles and rectangles came up in a natural way in
this context, so early geometry concentrated to this construct.
Circles too, were natural water tanks and other practical
projects.
- There are proofs that can introduce new techniques to attack other problems
in mathematics or offer
understanding for something different from the original context.
(Mathematician in early studies)
- Weber (2002) states that besides proofs that convince or/and explain there
are proofs that justify the use of definitions or an axiomatic structure and
proofs that illustrate proving techniques useful in other proving situations.
- Lucast considers proof and methods for problem solving as in principal the
same and states that proving is involved in the cognitive processes needed for
problem solving.
- Grabiner (1974) stated that the Greeks would transform mathematics from
an experimental science to an intellectual science. It would be the Greeks that
would be the first to transform mathematical statements through logical
arguments. Deductive methods would again be used in the seventeenth and
eighteenth century with the introduction of calculus and continuous functions.
In the eighteenth and nineteenth century, mathematics would again be
transformed with the discoveries of calculus and the discovery of non-
Euclidean geometries.
- Non-Euclidean geometry of the 1820s, various forms of abstract
algebra in the mid 1800s, and the transfinite numbers of the 1880s would
move mathematics away from any obvious connections to everyday life and
towards a more abstract approach in mathematics. At the end of the 1800s
David Hilbert emphasized that all mathematics could be derived by starting
from axioms and using the formal process of proof (Wolfram, 2002).
- “A proof is a directed tree of statements, connected by
implications, whose endpoint is the conclusion and whose starting points are
either in the data or are generally agreed facts or principles” - Bell (as cited in
Almeida, 1994)
The Greeks and the Birth of Proof
Is math an invention
or a discovery?
The role of technology in mathematics