Instructional Unit
History / Introduction of Pythagorean
Theorem
Who was Pythagoras?
- Born about 569 B.C. on the island
of Samos in Greece, he is often described as the first pure mathematician.
- As a child he spent his early
years on the island, but traveled frequently with his father
Mnesarchus.
- Later, Egypt was invaded by
the King of Persia, Cambyses II, and Pythagoras was taken prisoner
and brought to Babylon
- While in Babylon he associated
with the Magoi and studied their sacred rites and a very mystical
worship of the gods, while also perfecting arithmetic, music
and other mathematics under the instruction of the Babylonians.
- Pythagoras would later return
to Samos, then leave for southeastern Italy.
- It was there in Croton that
he founded a philosophical and religious school, often called
the Brotherhood of Pythagoreans, which was devoted to the study
of mathematics.
- What did the Brotherhood of
Pythagoreans accomplish?
- This school was divided into
2 parts:
- Inner circle whose members were
known as mathematikoi and lived permanently with the society
and were allowed no personal possessions
- Outer circle whose members were
known as the askousmatics and were allowed to live in their own
houses with their own possessions
- Among other things, the members
of this society believed that reality is mathematical in nature,
and observed strict loyalty and secrecy
- Pythagoras and his followers
were interested in the principles of mathematics, the concept
of number , the concept of a triangle or other mathematical figure
and the idea of an abstract proof
- Pythagoras and his followers
discovered many mathematical ideas and proofs, such as:
- Contributions to the mathematical
theory of music. Pythagoras was a musician as well, playing the
Lyre. He noticed that vibrating strings produce harmonious tones
when the ratios of the lengths of the strings are whole numbers,
and that these ratios could be used in other instruments as well
- The sum of the angles of a triangle
is equal to 2 right angles, or 180 degrees.
- In astronomy, he taught that
the Earth was a sphere at the center of the universe.
- He also taught the orbit of
the Moon was inclined to the equator
- The discovery of irrational
numbers. Since Pythagoras believed the philosophy that all things
are numbers, the fact that a number which could not be expressed
as a ration of two whole numbers did not sit well with him. Legend
has it that the Brotherhood drowned a man at sea for trying to
announce the discovery of irrational numbers
- Just before 500 B.C., the Society
was attacked by Cylon, a native of Croton who may have been denied
entrance into the Brotherhood. Pythagoras escaped to Metapontium,
where many believed he died, possibly of suicide.
Possibly the Brotherhoods most
famous proof, the Pythagorean Theorem, was already known by the
Babylonians 1000 years earlier, however it is believed that the
Pythagoreans were the first to prove it.
Legend has it that when finally
completing the proof, the Pythagoreans sacrificed 100 oxen.
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