Pythagoras
By: David • Essay • 475 Words • December 28, 2009 • 1,236 Views
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Pythagoras(580-500 BC) was the "Great Thinker" who discovered the Pythagorean Theorem in geometry. Pythagoras was born in Samos on the western coast of what is now Turkey. He was reportedly the son of a rich citizen named Mnesarchos. There he lived for many years under the rule of the tyrant Polycrates, who had a tendency to switch alliances in times of conflict, which were frequent. He met Thales, likely as a young man, who recommended he travel to Egypt. It seems certain that he gained much of his knowledge from the Egyptians, as had Thales before him. Not much else is known about Pythagoras, other than that he was a mathematician and philosopher who founded a community in southern Italy, sometime in the 6th century. His followers were extremely secretive and loyal, and held a mystical view of numbers and their relation to nature. Very similar to monks.
The theorem states that the sum of the squares of the two legs of a right triangle is equal to the square of the hypotenuse. There are 54 proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem. Here are a couple of examples. This is probably the most famous of all proofs of the Pythagorean proposition. It's the first of Euclid's two proofs (I.47). The underlying configuration became known under a variety of names, the Bride's Chair likely being the most popular.
First of all, ABF = AEC by SAS. This is because, AE = AB, AF = AC, and
BAF = BAC + CAF = CAB + BAE = CAE.
1)We start with two squares with sides a and b, respectively, placed side by side. The total area of the two squares is a2+b2.