(New page: If I really had to pick one (and I do!), I would have to pick the Pythagorean theorem. I have a few reasons - including memories of friends giving hour-long proofs of this theorem, memorie...)
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
If I really had to pick one (and I do!), I would have to pick the Pythagorean theorem. I have a few reasons - including memories of friends giving hour-long proofs of this theorem, memories of high school math, memories of a seven-page paper on Pytagoreas, etc., etc. I guess the main reason is that it's one of the more commonly used theorems, and it comes in handy a lot in geometry - which is where I think I'll end up teaching first.  
+
If I really had to pick one (and I do!), I would have to pick the Pythagorean theorem. I have a few reasons - including memories of friends giving hour-long proofs of this theorem, memories of high school math, memories of a seven-page paper on Pytagoreas, etc., etc. I guess the main reason is that (besides right triangles being the sexiest triangles, and thereby making all right-triangle theorems the sexiest theorems) it's one of the more commonly used theorems, and it comes in handy a lot in geometry - which is where I think I'll end up teaching first.  
  
 +
Pythagorean Theorem:
 +
<math>a^2 + b^2 = c^2</math>
  
  
**For some reason, I had a little bit of trouble with getting this to work, so I hope everything went through all right.
+
 
 +
*For some reason, I had a little bit of trouble with getting this to work, so I hope everything went through all right.

Latest revision as of 19:02, 31 August 2008

If I really had to pick one (and I do!), I would have to pick the Pythagorean theorem. I have a few reasons - including memories of friends giving hour-long proofs of this theorem, memories of high school math, memories of a seven-page paper on Pytagoreas, etc., etc. I guess the main reason is that (besides right triangles being the sexiest triangles, and thereby making all right-triangle theorems the sexiest theorems) it's one of the more commonly used theorems, and it comes in handy a lot in geometry - which is where I think I'll end up teaching first.

Pythagorean Theorem: $ a^2 + b^2 = c^2 $


  • For some reason, I had a little bit of trouble with getting this to work, so I hope everything went through all right.

Alumni Liaison

Prof. Math. Ohio State and Associate Dean
Outstanding Alumnus Purdue Math 2008

Jeff McNeal