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Mathematical Mysteries

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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 29 Jan 2007, 21:32:11

In Carl Sagan's book Contact on which they based the movie with Jodie Foster, he presented a beautiful conception: at one point he gets around to discussing the idea of pi calculated in the base 11 number system. After calculating for a huge number of digits a startling pattern emerges with all kinds of amazing symmetry revealing the signature of God. I think it was the alien race that revealed that to humans. But getting back to pi as we know it: one can find on the internet pi calculated to rather large numbers of digits. This number which cannot be written exactly nonetheless has the property of being the multiple of the diameter of a circle which gives the circumference. Not a trivial property. Take any random interposition of two digits and you no longer have pi (provided they are not the same digit). Obviously, there is no limit to the number of such interpositions. Do these new numbers have any interesting properties? do they have any meaning? Pi certainly has a meaning, what about all these others? This is a notion that makes me think that science and mathematics, as known, is merely a drop in the bucket compared to what is in principle knowable, that not only are numbers infinite, but knowledge is too. We humans are going to run out of gas, pardon the pun, before we come even close to unraveling all the mysteries.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby Zentric » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 02:15:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'I')n Carl Sagan's book Contact on which they based the movie with Jodie Foster, he presented a beautiful conception: at one point he gets around to discussing the idea of pi calculated in the base 11 number system. After calculating for a huge number of digits a startling pattern emerges with all kinds of amazing symmetry revealing the signature of God. I think it was the alien race that revealed that to humans. But getting back to pi as we know it: one can find on the internet pi calculated to rather large numbers of digits. This number which cannot be written exactly nonetheless has the property of being the multiple of the diameter of a circle which gives the circumference. Not a trivial property. Take any random interposition of two digits and you no longer have pi (provided they are not the same digit). Obviously, there is no limit to the number of such interpositions. Do these new numbers have any interesting properties? do they have any meaning? Pi certainly has a meaning, what about all these others? This is a notion that makes me think that science and mathematics, as known, is merely a drop in the bucket compared to what is in principle knowable, that not only are numbers infinite, but knowledge is too. We humans are going to run out of gas, pardon the pun, before we come even close to unraveling all the mysteries.


Funny how you mentioned 'running out of gas' since I was just before that thinking how pi could be thought of as some basic multiplier - for instance expressing how much further you'd have to go to drive around a circle compared to simply driving from the circle's center to its edge. But, seriously, what's the big deal? Pi is as well understood as it needs to be. And when talking about a circle, for instance, it simply represents the ratio between two completely different types of things - essentially closed curviness (circumference) and plain straightness (diameter) - so why should we even expect the relationship to be "rational"?

When using calculus to find the area/volume of a sphere, doing it with spherical coordinates plainly works best - because we're solving for a spherical space. On the other hand, if you want to find the volume of a cube, don't use spherical coordinates to solve this- use Cartesian (or rectangular) coordinates instead.

If you think about it, our habit, while we're here being human on the earth's surface, building and living in orthogonal boxes (houses), on square lots, buying our shoes and other consumer goods contained in boxes, and specifying carpeting and cloth and refrigerators in square or cubical terms have greatly prejudiced us when we then start thinking about fundamentally circular or spherical phenomena.

I can't give you an elegant proof of this, but say you were a large circular being who lived around a circular planet, existing in a completely circular way. When doing math homework, you'd naturally use spherical coordinates, and you wouldn't be so fascinated with the irrational nature of pi, and that's because you would have long ago contemplated and come to terms with life's essential curviness.

On the other hand, that pi can pop up out of nowhere in some formulas while apparently having nothing at all to do with curviness probably is fascinating. Maybe this shows some special hidden relationship - you know, kind of like how the apparent equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass actually implies the theory of relativity? Perhaps exp (i*pi) = -1 also suggests something potentially mind-bending. I myself wouldn't know.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 11:35:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', ' ')why should we even expect the relationship to be "rational"?
I'm trying to see it from the Greek mathematician's perspective. It is their expectation that a quantity which is a fraction (such as the excess over three units for a circle with diameter of one unit) can be expressed as a ratio. The idea behind it is that it can be measured. Then they find out after a lot of work that it can't be measured.

Measurement is a basic idea in math. Measurement is based on the notion of counting. Turns out one can't count out pi. And your hypothetical being living in a curved world couldn't measure a line (exactly).

I would guess that this discovery was for them something analogous to what the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle was in modern times: something really strange and unexpected. And it isn't just a circle that can be constructed but not measured: if one constructs a right triangle with sides of 1 and 2 units, the hypotenuse is then radical 5 and it can't be measured either.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 13:06:46

if people want to use "rational" to mean western bias or philosophical myopia, that's fine. I'm using the word to mean a ratio of two discrete numbers, period. have a nice day.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby Specop_007 » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 15:31:48

Its well understood, although rarely mentioned, that there are certain problems our current system of math is either poor or downright impossible to answer.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 16:20:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', 'I')ts well understood, although rarely mentioned, that there are certain problems our current system of math is either poor or downright impossible to answer.
There was one famous one that was recently solved by some reclusive Russian who wouldn't accept the prize or attend the prize ceremony. I think it was that theorem about polynomials that Fermat wrote in a book margin about which he said it was a "marvelous proof but it wouldn't fit in the margin". No one ever figured out what he was talking about and the Russian guy's proof went to the hundreds of pages. That's the one that Captain Picard was always trying to figure out in Star Trek, Next Generation.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby Zentric » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 17:10:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'I') would guess that this discovery was for them something analogous to what the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle was in modern times: something really strange and unexpected. And it isn't just a circle that can be constructed but not measured: if one constructs a right triangle with sides of 1 and 2 units, the hypotenuse is then radical 5 and it can't be measured either.


I agree. But Raphael also might have a point...

Consider the dichotomy, either pi is an irrational number or it isn't. If it isn't irrational, that means it can be expressed either as a whole number or a fraction, twenty-two sevenths, for example...

If pi could subsequently be proven to be exactly 22/7, wouldn't mathematicians everywhere then go "whoa ... why in heavens would pi be exactly that? What are the gods telling us?

Now look at the alternative, where pi is proven not to be expressible as a fraction, that is, pi is proven to be irrational. In this case, we would still say (and, in fact, do say) "what does it all mean...?"

So no matter the nature of pi's value, we're destined to be awestruck by it, which, in other words, is to say that numbers are just numbers, but it is really us humans who are being "irrational" for thinking that geometrical relationships should be so neat and tidy.

Thought experiment: If you were to write down the leading mathematical formulas that derive pi to any desired degree of certainty, put them into a capsule and then shoot the capsule off into space such that the formulas would survive the upcoming contraction of the universe and subsequent new big-bang, where the fabric of the new universe is different such that the ratio between a circle's circumference and its diameter are now a different value, would our earlier formulas for deriving pi now be nonsense? In other words, do our current pi-deriving formulas make assumptions about the nature of space that possibly would not hold up as we proceed from our present universe to the next? In other other words, could the derivation of pi just be some convenient Euclidean construct - good for the present space-time, yet wholly inappropriate for our plans to journey across the multiverse?
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 17:35:47

This way of looking at it: humans are "irrational" to expect "tidiness" in numbers doesn't intrigue me. All this does is to muddy up the word and it is definately something that Raph loves to do. There are all kinds of amazing properties of integers themselves. Mysteries, unknowns, unexpected surprises, etc., that come up in number theory without having to go to irrational numbers to find "awe". What I was saying before, and will repeat: one can't measure pi with number systems. same for radical 5. Some were saying, "sure you can", and I said, "how?" I have not received my answer. I suggest that is because I am correct that one uses discrete number system to measure and that pi and radical five are convenient abstractions for unmeasurable quantities. valuable abstractions, to be sure, but abstractions nonetheless.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby Zentric » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 17:55:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'T')his way of looking at it: humans are "irrational" to expect "tidiness" in numbers doesn't intrigue me. All this does is to muddy up the word and it is definately something that Raph loves to do. There are all kinds of amazing properties of integers themselves. Mysteries, unknowns, unexpected surprises, etc., that come up in number theory without having to go to irrational numbers to find "awe". What I was saying before, and will repeat: one can't measure pi with number systems. same for radical 5. Some were saying, "sure you can", and I said, "how?" I have not received my answer. I suggest that is because I am correct that one uses discrete number system to measure and that pi and radical five are convenient abstractions for unmeasurable quantities. valuable abstractions, to be sure, but abstractions nonetheless.


So this discussion is about a disagreement, where you're saying that radical 5 and pi cannot be expressed as fractions, while others seem to imply that they can be. If that's what this discussion is about, then I'm with you, PMS.

You lost me on what you mean by "convenient abstractions for unmeasurable quantities." What, after all, is so abstract about either pi or sqrt(5)? I mean, look, I've just now expressed them both precisely.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 18:25:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', '
')You lost me on what you mean by "convenient abstractions for unmeasurable quantities." What, after all, is so abstract about either pi or sqrt(5)? I mean, look, I've just now expressed them both precisely.
Well, JF and SPG were saying that one can exactly represent radical 5 with a nondiscrete number system, which to me is absurd because there are only discrete number systems, based on the principle of counting, and so on. Not having a particularly advanced background, I was hoping to be shown to be incorrect if possible. Simply stating that number systems don't have to be discrete won't satisfy me since it seems to go against what I do know. It's been a couple days now, so either SPG and JF got bored and don't want to give me the straight stuff, or else they were talking about somthing they evidently don't understand as well as they thought they did, which is likely the case since SPG brought out logarithmic functions confusing functions with number systems and JF simply asserted something which as far as I know is false.

As for the abstraction thing: I guess it depends on what you mean by precision. If you are talking about measuring things then no, pi is not precise because the 3.14 thing is just approximate. If you mean pi abstractly as an idea: pi=c/d then sure. this may seem like hairsplitting, but read up on axiomatics if you want to see some really hairy hair-splitting!
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 19:17:07

from wiki: $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he word number has no generally agreed upon mathematical meaning, nor does the word number system. Instead, we have many examples. Thus there is no rule to say what is a number and what is not. Some of the more interesting examples of abstractions that can be considered numbers include the quaternions, the octonions, and the transfinite numbers.
There is the "real number system" which includes irrationals. In fact, it took Dedekind that I mentioned earlier to put this on a theoretical foundation. Using some advanced ideas one can represent radical 5. but not with digits, which is the word I should have been using. But think about this for a second, "the word number has no generally agreed upon meaning". That's a pretty amazing statement, and would seem to mean that mathematicians aren't too sure about anything! if the "real number system" is not established as to what it is or is not, then how do we settle a question such as what is pi? One thing is sure, pi can't be "counted to". I would guess that there are mathematicians who would argue as I have been that a "number system" implies counting and that extensions of meaning to uncountable or unmeasurable quantities are useful abstractions.
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby Free » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 20:45:24

Well I didn't read the thread completely so I don't know if it has been mentioned, but there is indeed the concept of countable and uncountable infinity, the cardinality, of a set.

For example the natural numbers have the cardinality of countable infinity,"Aleph0".

So have the rational numbers, which can be shown with a tricky but easy to understand proof (a kind of grid where you can count through).

Similarly you can show that the set of the real numbers has the cardinality of uncountable infinity, that they are "more infinite" than the natural numbers - basically the proof shows that how many real numbers you ever get, you can always construct a new one with the old ones...
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 20:46:42

There was a mathematician who used to post here a ways back, I don't remember his name, but I recall he was very haughty and condescending. My level of understanding of math is rather limited. Not that I couldn't have gone a lot further if I'd chosen to. I took a course in number theory about 5 years ago which was the hardest thing I ever did but it was fascinating. The endeavor is too rigidly left-brain. I'd almost prefer to think like Raphael than devote myself to math. So unless someone says something requiring a reply, here's PMS signing out on this one which may now go down the memory hole! :)
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Re: Mathematical Mysteries

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 21:42:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Free', ' ')
For example the natural numbers have the cardinality of countable infinity,"Aleph0".
Hi Free, I see you still have your Jackson Pollock inspired avatar. Yes, this was already covered. Since the best minds can't agree what a "number" is, I think I'll have a beer and listen to some music!
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