ReferenceResources:AncientGreece Jewelry, Greek Jewelry 5000 years of tradition. Marketplace, The Agora. Marriage,Marriage in Classical Athens. Mathematicians, Famous greek mathematicians. http://www.kidinfo.com/World_History/AncientGreece.html
Extractions: Reference Resources: Ancient Greece Ancient Greece Ancient Greece from World Civilizations Archaic Greece, Sparta, Athens, The Persian Wars, The Delian League, The Athenian Empire, The Peloponnesian War, The Spartan Hegemony, The Theban Hegemony, The Second Athenian Empire, Hellenistic Greece, Philip II, Alexander the Great, The Three Empires, Greek Drama, and MORE Ancient Greek Civilizations History of Aegean Civilization, Cultures of Greece, The Cities of Greece, Aspects of Culture and People in Ancient Greece, Timelines of Greek History, Maps The Ancient Greek World Life in ancient Greece has four major themes: Land and Time(The Land of Ancient Greece and Time Periods of Ancient Greece), Daily Life(the Greek Home, Women's and Men's Lives in Greece), Economy(Coinage, Trade, Manufacturing), Religion and Death Complete History of Ancient Greece Greek Civilization War Environment- Science- Sportand Daily Life- Religion- The Arts, other countries
Web-and-Flow Hunt: Greek Mathematicans examined the given sites and having answered the given questions, in your opinion,how are the contributions made by ancient greek mathematicians reflected in http://www.web-and-flow.com/members/psartin/gmath/hunt.htm
Extractions: by Pat Sartin Introduction Questions Web Resources ... Guide Many people claim that we live in an Information Age, where trying to learn amidst the explosion of facts and opinions is like sipping water from a fire hose. And the Internet seems to be the world's biggest fire hydrant. Still, just as we need water to survive, scholars need information to learn. Your task in this activity is to answer some key questions on the topic. The Web offers interesting facts and opinions that may not be available anywhere else, but to find the truth you may have to read between the lines. If you want an idea of how your learning will be evaluated, read this evaluation rubric . Finally, remember, this activity is about thinking and learning, not copying and pasting. How are inventions or home technology similar to today? Who has been described as the first pure mathematician?
Class Projects Constellations includes star maps. Ancient greek mathematicians -index and articles about ancient greek mathematicians. Permafrost. http://www.asdk12.org/schools/clark/pages/Library/projects.htm
10.8. Euclid (330?-275? B.C.) Short sketch potrays him as one of the most influential and best read mathematicians of all time.Category Kids and Teens School Time Math Mathematicians Euclid century. For his work in the field, he is known as the father of geometryand is considered one of the great greek mathematicians. Very http://www.shu.edu/html/teaching/math/reals/history/euclid.html
Extractions: 10.8. Euclid (330?-275? B.C.) IRA Euclid is one of the most influential and best read mathematician of all time. His prize work, Elements , was the textbook of elementary geometry and logic up to the early twentieth century. For his work in the field, he is known as the father of geometry and is considered one of the great Greek mathematicians. Very little is known about the life of Euclid. Both the dates and places of his birth and death are unknown. It is believed that he was educated at Plato's academy in Athens and stayed there until he was invited by Ptolemy I to teach at his newly founded university in Alexandria. There, Euclid founded the school of mathematics and remained there for the rest of his life. As a teacher, he was probably one of the mentors to Archimedes Personally, all accounts of Euclid describe him as a kind, fair, patient man who quickly helped and praised the works of others. However, this did not stop him from engaging in sarcasm. One story relates that one of his students complained that he had no use for any of the mathematics he was learning. Euclid quickly called to his slave to give the boy a coin because "he must make gain out of what he learns." Another story relates that Ptolemy asked the mathematician if there was some easier way to learn geometry than by learning all the theorems. Euclid replied, "There is no royal road to geometry" and sent the king to study. Euclid's fame comes from his writings, especially his masterpiece
History Of Astronomy: Persons: Sources Index of Ancient greek mathematicians and Astronomers; I Protagonisti della Scienza/HistoricalFigures from the World of Science (11 Jun 1996 disappeared http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/persons/pers-sources.html
Greek Democracy respectively. The math portion will focus on famous greek mathematicians.With List of Famous Ancient greek mathematicians Anthemius Antiphon http://lilt.ilstu.edu/connections/greek_democracy.htm
Extractions: The Democratic foundation established by the ancient Greeks Abstract: Our integrated project blends the subjects of math and history. Since two of our group members never bothered to show up these are the only two subjects we will be covering, with the two history majors focusing on religion and government respectively. The math portion will focus on famous Greek mathematicians. With the help of a special education major, we will alter the plan to cater to the needs of special needs students. I plan to use the week to explain how the ancient Greeks introduced a democratic form of government. This was a revolutionary form of rule in a world of dictators and tyrants. Throughout the week the class will learn about the origins of Greek democracy and its prominent figures. We will then compare and contrast the Greek form of democracy to the one used in our own government. We will also be discussing the possible reasons why democracy failed in Greece and if it seems possible for the United States to suffer the same fate. Names and Majors of the Team Members: Subjects Integrated: Objectives: Upon completion of this lesson, participating students will be able to note five key similarities between the ancient Greek democracy and the democracy of the United States.
Myths, Lies, And Truths From the earliest, the great greek mathematicians, including Pythagoras (~500 BC),Thales (~530 BC), and Exodus (the teacher of Aristotle) all learned much of http://www.math.buffalo.edu/mad/myths_lies.html
Extractions: Third U.S. president Thomas Jefferson in 1792 (when he was Secretary of State): "Comparing them by their faculties of memory, reason, and imagination, it appears to me that in memory [the Negro] are equal to the whites; in reason much inferior, as I think one could scarcely be found capable of tracing and comprehending the investigations of Euclid; and that in imagination they are dull, tasteless, and anomalous." Present day AND ancient achievements contradict such statments. In response, these web page have been created to exhibit accomplishments of the peoples of Africa and the African Diaspora within the Mathematical Sciences. Mathematics Historian W. Rouse Ball : The history of mathematics cannot with certainty be traced back to any school or period before that of the ... Greeks. Mathematician Morris Kline : [The Egyptians] barely recognized mathematics as a distinct discipline ... [Mathematics] finally secured a new grip on life in the highly congenial soil of Greece and waxed strongly for a short period . . . With the decline of Greek civilization the plant remained dormant for a thousand years . . . when he plant was transported to Europe proper and once more imbedded in fertile soil. [Also see Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times
Scholars Decode Ancient Text, Shake Up Pre-calculus History: 11/02 that modern mathematicians were the first to be able to handle infinitely large sets,and that this was something the greek mathematicians never attempted to do http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/november6/archimedes-116.html
Extractions: Stanford Report, November 6, 2002 Scholars decode ancient text, shake up pre-calculus history BY JOHN SANFORD Reviel Netz, an assistant professor of classics, might not have actually shouted "Eureka!" on a visit last year to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, but that's what he was thinking. A scholar of Greek mathematics, Netz was hanging out with one of his colleagues and frequent collaborators, Professor Ken Saito of the Osaka Prefecture University in Japan, when they flew together to Baltimore in January 2001 to look at a recently rediscovered codex of Archimedes treatises. "It was basically just tourism," Netz recalled. On a lark they examined a theretofore unread section of The Method of Mechanical Theorems , which is the book's biggest claim to fame; no other copy of the work is known to exist. What they discovered made their jaws drop. A section from The Archimedes Palimpsest, which classics Professor Reviel Netz stumbled on during a visit to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore. Closer examination showed the Greeks understood the concept of infinity. ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, WALTERS ART MUSEUM, JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Reviel Netz July 1998 Why Did greek mathematicians Publish their Analyses? K. Chemla et al) forthcoming.Published Articles 2002 greek mathematicians a Group Picture. http://www.ceu.hu/sun/sun 2003 modmod/CV/reviel_netz_2003.htm
Extractions: M.A. Thesis Supervisor: Prof. Z. Bechler. Fellowships and Awards Reid Hall Fellowship (administered by Columbia University) 2002 MacNamara Faculty Fellowship, Stanford University 2000-2001 Runciman Award (for Shaping of Deduction in Greek Mathematics Post-Doctoral Fellowship, The Dibner Institute for 1998-99, for the History of Science and Technology Hellenic Foundation Prize, 1998 for the best U.K. dissertation on ancient science and philosophy
Resources For Greek Mathematics Trisecting an angle; Greek astronomy; Index of greek mathematicians; Chronologyof the Greek period 650 BC 500 AD. Resources and Notes for Geometry. http://www2.sunysuffolk.edu/wrightj/MA28/Greek/
Symmetries And Patterns Western mathematicians, based on work dating back to the early greek mathematicians,developed ways to analyze, describe, and classify many kinds of pattern http://cs.beloit.edu/~chavey/M103/Symmetries.html
Extractions: Many cultures throughout the world, and throughout history, use various styles of pattern repetition to create artwork, or to add artistic elements to their crafts and material culture. Western mathematicians, based on work dating back to the early Greek mathematicians, developed ways to analyze, describe, and classify many kinds of pattern repetition. These techniques have been very successful in modeling (describing) the kinds of pattern repetition commonly found in Western art. Unfortunately these techniques have not been quite as successful in modeling the kinds of pattern repetition that artists and craftsmen of other cultures have embedded into their work. Western mathematicians and artists have often viewed these "non-Western" pattern types as being "non-symmetric," or at least they have failed to understand the complexity hidden within these patterns. There is something in the European cultural background that led artists and mathematicians to the same class of patterns; Greek mathematics and art was so influential on the cultural development in Europe that geometric patterns largely developed along the lines described by Greek notions of symmetry;
Extractions: W. P. Watson Antiquarian Books APOLLONIUS Pergaeus [colophon:] Venice, Bernardo Bindoni, 1537 Folio (303 x 208 mm), ff 88 [2, including terminal blank leaf], title in red and black above a woodcut portrait of the author holding a sphere and surrounded by an elaborate historiated border depicting 11 pairs of ancient worthies, a garden below, numerous woodcut diagrams in text; lower blank margin of title repaired, a fine, crisp, unpressed copy, with the strong impress in blind of the bearer type prominent in the lower blank margins, in original, possibly publisher's, vellum boards, sheep spine ruled in gilt, some worming to spine, in a morocco-backed box. £34,000 First edition of Apollonius's Conics (books I-IV; books V-VII weren't printed until 1661), one of the three greatest works, along with those of Euclid and Archimedes, of classic mathematics. 'Apollonius (c. 245-190 BC) was the last of the great Greek mathematicians, whose treatise on conic sections represents the final flowering of Greek mathematics' (Hutchinson's Dictionary of Scientific Biography p 16). This edition is the first printing of any work by Apollonius, preceding by 29 years the Commandino edition of 1566, also of the first four books. These were the only books to survive in the original Greek; books V-VII survived in Arabic versions only (book VIII is lost), and were translated and published in 1661 at the instigation of Borelli.
ThinkQuest Library Of Entries Ý Indian Mathematics greek mathematicians were good at geometry butthey were not at arithmetic and algebra because they didn't use signs. http://library.thinkquest.org/22584/emh1300.htm
Extractions: The web site you have requested, Mathematics History , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Mathematics History click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ... click here to view this site Click image for the Site Languages : Site Desciption An extensive history of mathematics is at your fingertips, from Babylonian cuneiforms to advances in Egyptian geometry, from Mayan numbers to contemporary theories of axiomatical mathematics. You will find it all here. Biographical information about a number of important mathematicians is included at this excellent site.
ThinkQuest Library Of Entries Certainly one of the greatest achievements of the early greek mathematicianswas the creation of the postulational form of thinking. http://library.thinkquest.org/22584/emh1200.htm
Extractions: The web site you have requested, Mathematics History , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Mathematics History click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ... click here to view this site Click image for the Site Languages : Site Desciption An extensive history of mathematics is at your fingertips, from Babylonian cuneiforms to advances in Egyptian geometry, from Mayan numbers to contemporary theories of axiomatical mathematics. You will find it all here. Biographical information about a number of important mathematicians is included at this excellent site.
History Of Geometry Sulbasutras Baudhayana (800-740 BC) - Apastamba (600-540 BC). GreekGeometry (600 BC - 400 AD). Time Line of greek mathematicians. http://geometryalgorithms.com/history.htm
Extractions: A Short History of Geometry Ancient This page gives a short outline of geometry's history, exemplified by major geometers responsible for it's evolution. Click on a person's picture or name for an expanded biography at the excellent: History of Mathematics Archive (Univ of St Andrews, Scotland). Also, Click these links for our recommended: Greek Medieval Modern History Books ... History Web Sites The geometry of Babylon (in Mesopotamia) and Egypt was mostly experimentally derived rules used by the engineers of those civilizations. They knew how to compute areas, and even knew the "Pythagorian Theorem" 1000 years before the Greeks (see: Pythagoras's theorem in Babylonian mathematics ). But there is no evidence that they logically deduced geometric facts from basic principles. Nevertheless, they established the framework that inspired Greek geometry. A detailed analysis of Egyptian mathematics is given in the book: Mathematics in the Time of the Pharaohs India (1500 BC - 200 BC)
Real Numbers them. It wasn't until about 200 BC., however, that greek mathematiciansmade the jump from finite numbers to infinite numbers. This http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/j/x/jxt18/Math4_WEB/Math4 Math Assignments/R
Math Resources Greek Mathematics and its Modern Heirs. Some background information andhistory on greek mathematicians and their works. Help for Math Anxiety. http://teams.lacoe.edu/documentation/places/math/student.html
Extractions: Student Resources Swarthmore math students and even world-famous mathematicians working on The Swat Team answer K12 student math questions. Biographies to illustrate the numerous achievements of women in mathematics. Martindale's 'The Reference Desk' provides calculators for just about every purpose! Mathematicians from 1700 B.C.E. to 1970, maintained by David E. Joyce at Clark University. Center for Scientific Computing is the Finnish national large scale computing facility that offers a wide selection of mathematical topics and information. Flashcards - 1st Grade
Famous Mathematicians Indexes of Biographies. Hall of Great Mathematicians. Biographies of WomenMathematicians. Great Mathematicians. greek mathematicians. Mathematicians. http://ms.houstonisd.org/stevensonms/Faculty and Staff/famous_mathematicians.htm
Greece Greek poet Sophocles A guide to his life and works Herodotus Links and informationAristophanes Information and links greek mathematicians Find information http://www.swindsor.k12.ct.us/Schools/tems/greece.html
LBST 302A: Resources Vase Collection. Index of greek mathematicians, Exploring AncientWorld Cultures Greece, Perseus Greek Sculpture Collection. Greek http://faculty.fullerton.edu/cibrahim/302alinks.html
Extractions: Liberal Studies Department California State University, Fullerton LBST 302A: Historical Dimensions of Liberal Studies 302A Links Printer-Friendly Syllabus Reading Schedule Resources Handouts ... Email Now Playing "Na M'agapi" Courtesy of Giannis' Greek Midis a d f f f f f f f f f d d d d d d s ss a a aa dasdf adsf asdf d d d d d d d d d d d dd d d d d d d d d d dd d d d d d dd d d d d d dd d d d d d dd d d d d d dd d d d d d dd d d d d d dd w d Resources Menu The links below have been carefully chosen for the relationship between their content and the subject areas that we will cover in class. They are meant to assist you in the further development of your understanding of the material; they are a supplement to, not a replacement for, the textbooks or lectures. links Greece Rome Christianity Islam ... Medieval Europe a b c d e f g h i Greece Natural Sciences Social Thought Arts and Humanities Greek Astronomy The Rise of Athens and the Athenian Democracy Greek Art and Architecture Archimedes Home Page ... top a b c d e f g h Rome Natural Sciences Social Thought Arts and Humanities Opthamology in Ancient Rome Exploring Ancient World Cultures: Rome Roman Aqueducts Ancient Roman Technology ... top a b c d e f g h Early Christianity Natural Science Social Thought Arts and Humanities Byzantine Medicine The Jewish Roman World of Jesus Medieval and Early Christian Art From Jesus to Christ ... top a