The Pythagorean Theorem: A 4,000-year History

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, 2007 - Pythagorean theorem - 259 pages
3 Reviews
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified

By any measure, the Pythagorean theorem is the most famous statement in all of mathematics, one remembered from high school geometry class by even the most math-phobic students. Well over four hundred proofs are known to exist, including ones by a twelve-year-old Einstein, a young blind girl, Leonardo da Vinci, and a future president of the United States. Here--perhaps for the first time in English--is the full story of this famous theorem.

Although attributed to Pythagoras, the theorem was known to the Babylonians more than a thousand years before him. He may have been the first to prove it, but his proof--if indeed he had one--is lost to us. Euclid immortalized it as Proposition 47 in his Elements, and it is from there that it has passed down to generations of students. The theorem is central to almost every branch of science, pure or applied. It has even been proposed as a means to communicate with extraterrestrial beings, if and when we discover them. And, expanded to four-dimensional space-time, it plays a pivotal role in Einstein's theory of relativity.

In this book, Eli Maor brings to life many of the characters that played a role in the development of the Pythagorean theorem, providing a fascinating backdrop to perhaps our oldest enduring mathematical legacy.

From inside the book

What people are saying - Write a review

Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified

LibraryThing Review

User Review  - themulhern - LibraryThing

Eli Maor writes clearly, interestingly, and soberly. No dumb jokes to lighten up the subject matter! Detailed Review: Preface: The Pythagorean Theorem, why is it interesting? Just a teaser, really ... Read full review

LibraryThing Review

User Review  - fpagan - LibraryThing

Interesting selection of math topics surrounding "a squared plus b squared equals c squared." Not equation-phobic, nor even calculus-phobic, yet pretty undemanding. *Badly* marred by the overleaf placement of figures. Read full review

Contents

IV
4
V
13
VI
17
VII
32
VIII
45
IX
50
X
57
XI
76
XXIV
177
XXV
181
XXVI
188
XXVII
197
XXVIII
201
XXIX
208
XXX
213
XXXI
219

XII
82
XIII
94
XIV
98
XV
115
XVI
117
XVII
119
XVIII
123
XIX
140
XX
142
XXI
145
XXII
158
XXIII
168
XXXII
221
XXXIII
223
XXXIV
227
XXXV
229
XXXVI
231
XXXVII
235
XXXVIII
237
XXXIX
241
XL
247
XLI
251
XLII
253
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Eli Maor teaches the history of mathematics at Loyola University in Chicago. He is the author of Venus in Transit, Trigonometric Delights, e: The Story of a Number, and To Infinity and Beyond: A Cultural History of the Infinite (all Princeton).

Bibliographic information