1 / 35

Algebraic Symbolism

Algebraic Symbolism. Christie Epps Abby Krueger Maria Melby Brett Jolly.

rsilvestri
Download Presentation

Algebraic Symbolism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Algebraic Symbolism Christie Epps Abby Krueger Maria Melby Brett Jolly

  2. “Every meaningful mathematical statement can also be expressed in plain language. Many plain language statements of mathematical expressions would fill several pages, while to express them in mathematical notation might take as little as one line. One of the ways to achieve this remarkable compression is to use symbols to stand for statements, instructions and so on.” Lancelot Hogben

  3. Three Stages • Rhetorical (1650 BCE-200 CE): algebra was written in words without symbols. • Syncopated (200 CE-1500 CE): algebra which used some shorthand or abbreviations • Symbolic (1500 CE- present): algebra which used mainly symbols

  4. Historically algebra developed in Egypt and Babylonia around 1650 B.C.E. • Developed in response to practical needs in agriculture, business, and industry. • Egyptian algebra was less sophisticated possibly because of their number system • Babylonian influence spread to Greece (500-300 B.C.E.) then to the Arabian Empire and India (700 C.E.) and onto Europe (1100 C.E.).

  5. Two factors played a large role in standardizing mathematical symbols: • Invention of the printing press • Strong economies who encouraged the traveling of scholars resulting in the transmission of ideas • Still today there are differences in the use of notation: • Log and ln • In Europe they use a comma where Americans use a period (i.e. 3,14 for 3.14). Printing press 1445 C.E.

  6. Rhetorical Algebra1650 BCE-200 CEno abbreviations or symbols • Early Babylonian and Egyptian algebras were both rhetorical • In Greece, the wording was more geometric but was still rhetorical. • The Chinese also started with rhetorical algebra and used it longer.

  7. Greek Contributions • Three periods: 1. Hellenic (6th Century BCE): Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle • Pythagorean Theorem 2. Golden Age (5th Century BCE): Hippocrates, Eudoxus • Translation of arithmetical operations into geometric language 3. Hellenistic (4th Century BCE): School of Alexandria, Euclid, Archimedes, Apollonius, Ptolemy, Pappus • Euclid’s Elements, conic sections, cubic equations.

  8. Chinese History • Decline of learning in the West after the 3rd century BCE but development of math continued in the East. • The first true evidence of mathematical activity in China can be found in numeration symbols on tortoise shells and flat cattle bones (14th century B.C.E.). • About the same time the magic square was founded and led to the development of the dualistic theory of Yin and Yang. Yin represents even numbers and Yang represents odd numbers. • Between 1000-500 BCE the Chinese discovered the equivalent of the Pythagorean Theorem. • 300 BCE to the turn of the century: square and cube roots, systems of linear equations, circles, volume of a pyramid • 200-300 CE we see Liu Hui and his approximation of pi • By 600 CE there was translation of some Indian math works in China • 700 CE: The Chinese are credited with the concept of 0. • 1000-1200 CE: algebraic equations for geometry

  9. Syncopated Algebra200 CE-1500 CEsome shorthand or abbreviations • Started with Diophantus and lasted until 17th Century BCE. • However, in most parts of the world other than Greece and India, rhetorical algebra persisted for a longer period (in W. Europe until 15th Century CE). • The revival of the Alexandrian school was accompanied by a fundamental change of orientation of math research. • Geometry was the foundation of math, now the number was the foundation which resulted in the independent evolution of Algebra

  10. Diophantus • This independence of algebra is attributed to Diophantus who used syncopated algebra in his Arithmetica (250 CE). • He defined a number as a collection of units • Introduced negative numbers but used them only in indeterminate computations and sought only positive solutions • Introduced signs for an unknown and its powers • Had a symbol for equality and an indeterminate square

  11. Aryabhata and Brahmagupta • Ist century CE from India • Developed a syncopated algebra • Ya stood for the main unknown and their words for colors stood for other unknowns

  12. Symbolic Algebramainly symbols • Began to develop around 1500 but did not fully replace rhetorical and syncopated algebra until the 17th century • Symbols evolved many times as mathematicians strived for compact and efficient notation • Over time the symbols became more useable and standardized

  13. “Early Renaissance” Mathematics Transmission by 3 routes: • Arabs who conquered Spain & established the first advanced schools • Arab east • Turkey/Greece

  14. Jordanus Nemorarius • Picked letters in alphabetical order to stand for concrete numbers with no distinction between knowns and unknowns. • He used Roman numerals and did not have signs for equality and algebraic operations.

  15. 14th Century • Italian mathematicians translated Arab words into Latin for the unknown and its powers. • co – x (thing) • ce – x2 • cu – x3 • ce-ce – x4 • R – square root • q.p0 – y • Pui – addition • Meno – subtraction

  16. 15th Century: Revival of Algebraic Investigations Luca Pacioli (1494) • Had symbol for the constant and was the first to show symbols for the first 29 powers of the unknown. • Symbol for a second unknown • Symbols for addition and subtraction Bombelli: • 3√2+√-3 • R.c.L2puidimeno • di menoR.q.3 • 1 – unknown • 2 3 - powers Stevin’s power notation • 1, 2, … - unknowns and powers

  17. Johannes Widman (1462-1498): German “…- is the same as shortage and + is the same as excess.” (Bashmakova) Nicolas Chuquet (1445-1488): French • exponential notation (12x^3 written as 12^3) • symbolism for the zeroth power • introduced negative numbers as exponents

  18. 16th Century: Age of Algebra Christoff Rudolff (1499-1545): German • Coss, first German algebra book • current +,- signs used for first time in algebraic text • modern symbol for square root (√ ) Michael Stifle (1487-1567) • brought a close to the evolution of algebraic symbolism • used (Latin) A, B, C,… to denote unknowns • notation adopted in Germany & Italy Robert Recorde (1510-1558): • modern symbol for equality

  19. Solution of the Cubic Equation • Scipione del Ferro (1456-1526) • Niccolo Tartaglia (1499-1557) • Girolamo Cardano (1501-1576) • “irreductible” case • The form of √m with m < 0

  20. Rafael Bombelli (1526-1573): Italy • introduced complex numbers and used them to solve algebraic equations • introduced successive integral powers of rational numbers • explains “irreductible” case

  21. Francios Viete (1540-1603): France • “An Introduction to the Art of Analysis” • introduced the language of formulas into math • IMPORTANT STEP: use of literal notation for knowns and unknowns • allowed writing equations and identities in general form “The end of the 16th century marked a crucial turning point in the evolution of algebra, for the first time it found its own language, namely the literal calculus.” (Bashmakova)

  22. William Oughtred • Born in Eton, Buckinghamshire, England in 1574 • Died in Albury, Surrey, England in 1660

  23. William Oughtred • Wrote Clavis Mathematicae in 1631 • Described Hindu-Arabic notation and decimal fractions • Created new symbols • Multiplication x • Proportion :: • Pi for circumference  (not for ratio of circumference to diameter)

  24. Rene` Descartes • Born in France, 1596 • Died in Sweden, 1650

  25. Cartesian Graph • Created, along with Fermat, the Cartesian graph • Brought algebra to geometry • Allowed circles and loops to be graphed from algebraic equations

  26. Imaginary Roots • Created the name imaginary for imaginary roots • Descartes says “one can ‘imagine’ for every equation of degree n, n roots but these imagined roots do not correspond to any real quantity.” • (J.J. O’ Conner and E. F. Robertson)

  27. Polynomial Roots • Stated a polynomial that disappears at y has a root x-y. • Reason why solving for the roots using the factor theorem form: (x-y)*(x-z)=r

  28. Variables • Descartes was also known for today’s variables • Changed unknowns from Viete’s (a e i o u) to (u v w x y z) –end of alphabet. • Created knowns from consonants to (a b c d) –beginning of alphabet

  29. Descartes • Changes in Algebraic Symbolism • Time it took • Each person affected it in their own way

  30. Thomas Harriot (1560 – 1621) • Known best for his work in algebra • Introduced a simplified notation for algebra • Debate as to who was first, Viete or Harriot • Ahead of his time in his theory of equations and notation simplification • Accepted real and imaginary roots • Worked with cubics • If a, b, c are the roots of a cubic then the cubic equation is (x-a)(x-b)(x-c)=0

  31. Reproduction of his solution to an equation of degree four: Example taken from http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Harriot.html Only change made to his work was the equals sign was different

  32. Harriot cont. • He never published any of his findings, circulated amongst his peers • His works were published after his death (Artis Analyticae Praxis ad Aequationes Algebraicas Resolvendas (1631)) • were badly edited • < > controversy • He was also an explorer, navigational expert, scientist and astronomer • Worked with Sir Walter Raleigh ~1583 • did not discuss negative solutions

  33. Albert Girard (1595 – 1632) • Worked with sequences, cubics, trigonometry, and military applications • Had different representation of algebraic formulas: • x3 = 13x + 12 => 1 3 X 13 1 +12, with a circle around the 3 and 1 superscripted • 1626-publishes an essay on trigonometry • first to use negative numbers in geometry • introduces sin, cos, and tan • also included formulas for area of a spherical triangle

  34. Girard cont. • 1629- Invention nouvelle en l'algebre (New Discoveries in Algebra) is published • writes the beginnings of the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra • talks about relationship between roots and coeffiecients • allowing negative and imaginary roots to equations • his understanding of negative solutions lead the way toward the number line • “laid off in the direction opposite that of the positive” • introduced the idea of a fractional exponent • numerator = power, denominator = root • introduced the modern notation for higher roots • 3√9 instead of 91/3

  35. Girard cont. • 1634- Formulates the inductive definition fn+2= fn+1+ fn for the Fibonacci Sequence • Interested in the military applications of mathematics • This was a time of discovery and conquering • The “New World” was being explored….America is being colonized

More Related