Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Re: Dancing Euclidean Proofs!

I have always thought of proofs as something very logical and routined and I like that aspect of it a lot. The structure of proofing something has its beauty in the form of clean lines and clear step-by-step procedure. However, dance to me is very soft and indirect. Proofs to me are like the school of Bauhaus in design, it's very logical and clear-minded with very little warmth to it. 
After reading the article, especially after watching the dance itself. I felt the warmth and logical beauty of proof through the dance itself. More accurately, I think the movement of the human body is a piece of art itself. 
I find it's fascinating that we can use our legs and arms to "prove" such complicated proof. The rhythm of the dance mirrors the logical side of the proof, it's planned with thoughts but flows so seemingly. 
For non-math people, it becomes so much easier to understand the basic concept of the proof through the use of our own bodies. 
I was also surprised to realize the natural symmetries of our body which is very mathematical in some ways. In conclusion, I appreciated the fact that they used the form of dance to show the beauty/logical thoughts behind proofs!

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Re:Explication and commentary on a poem about Euclid (and a parody of it)!

 Euclid is often referred as "the father of Geometry". Geometry exists everywhere in nature, it is the most bare version of beauty. Euclid uses math to show the beauty of nature through the eye of geometry, he also used nature to explore the beauty of mathematics. These two things are naturally inseparable. Euclid's vision on geometry opened all of ours eyes, he created mathematical language to express the beauty of geometry around us. He had a pair of eyes to see through things and noticed the bare bone of lots of things that are related to math. 

Thanks to Euclid, we were able to use math to express/sketch the things we see in this world. We were able to document a lot of historical events using math! 


From the first poem, it seems like It's Euclid who lifted the veil of mystery of the mathematical behind all the natural beauty. The harmony of nature and math was all along there waiting for humans to discover it, and Euclid noticed it. The gate of math then revealed at that moment. Time never stopped, nature never waited for anyone, nature takes its course and it seemed like Euclid was the savior of the dark time of math and opened the gate of pandora's box of mathematics. 

The second poem seems like is criticizing the prasie most people had towards Eulid. It aruges that beauty is in everyone's eyes, math belongs to all of us. No one could be the maker of nature. In other words, no one was the maker of mathematics. Math has been always existed among us, in our day-to-day life. Math is like the air, we breath in and out every day. 

Maybe it's a bit off the topic, it reminded me of a movie called Prometheus. Who is the God, who made us? and, who made them? Who made this world and who created the nature which is incredibly beautiful and mathematical? 



Re: Class reflection

     Before starting this class, I thought the history of math would be bland and dry to learn. However, as the class went on, I really enjo...