Proving the “obvious”

from graphjam.com

As Eric Temple Bell said, “‘Obvious’ is the most dangerous word in mathematics.” That being the case, it is often true that we have trouble proving statements that seem self-evident. Many times we are indeed tempted to say “clearly” or “obviously” or “it is trivial” or “the details have been left to the reader” or “this easily follows from Theorems 4.8, 5.1, and Definition 5.8”. For a full list of invalid proof techniques, visit this hilarious site. Here are a few samples (it’s a LONG list!), quoted from  full list on their site:

  • Proof by intimidation (“Trivial.”)
  • Proof by example (The author gives only the case n = 2 and suggests that it contains most of the ideas of the general proof.)
  • Proof by vigorous hand waving (Works well in a classroom or seminar setting. )
  • Proof by exhaustion (An issue or two of a journal devoted to your proof is useful. )
  • Proof by importance (A large body of useful consequences all follow from the proposition in question.)
  • Proof by accelerated course (We don’t have time to prove this… )

Choosing the level of rigor for a proof is often difficult–depending on the mathematical context, and the audience. I’m taking a graduate class in Analysis right now, so I definitely think about this a lot! In fact, I might add one more to the list:

  • Proof by beautiful typesetting (Because the proof looks good and is typed in \LaTeX, it must be right.)

At least,  I hope my professor feels that’s a valid technique :-).

The Arc Cotangent Controversy

I love this discussion at squareCircleZ. All my readers should check it out. Which is the graph of arccot(x)?

from squarecircleZ

from squarecircleZ

I especially like this controversy because some big players have weighed in on each side. Mathcad and Maple prefer the first interpretation, Mathematica and Matlab prefer the second.

For a more thorough treatment, check out the original post here. Three cheers for great math blogging! 🙂

Population Mean & Median

Have you seen this map, which shows the geographic center of the USA and also plots the current median and mean of the population? Very interesting! I got it from another math teacher, but I think the original source is the US Census Bureau (that’s what the bottom of the file says at least!). It inspired me to do some more poking around, and in the wikipedia article I found this map of how the population mean has moved over the last two centuries. Cool.

 

The movement of the population mean 1790-2010

 

And of course, here’s the median’s movement over time, too:

Movement of the Population Median

 

John Milnor wins Abel Prize

Just two days ago, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters awarded mathematician John Milnor the 2011 Abel Prize. Though it was just awarded, the prize is in recognition of decades of work. Here’s a link to the short piece on NPR show All Things Considered. And here’s a direct link to the Abel prize website.  And here’s a snippet from the Scientific American article:

Dimension-Cruncher: Exotic Spheres Earn Mathematician John Milnor an Abel Prize

His discovery that some seven-dimensional spheres look different under the lens of calculus spurred decades of research in topology.

John Milnor, an American mathematician best known for the discovery of exotic hyperspheres, was awarded the 2011 Abel Prize, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced March 23.

Milnor, a professor at Stony Brook University in New York State, got a call at his Long Island home at 6 A.M. informing him he was receiving the $1-million prize—an honor first awarded in 2003 as mathematics’ answer to the Nobel Prizes. “I knew I was a possible candidate, but I certainly didn’t expect it,” says Milnor, 80, who had already earned numerous awards during his career, including a Fields Medal in 1962 and a Wolf Prize in 1989. Milnor is the second consecutive American-born Abel laureate; the 2010 prize went to John Tate of the University of Texas at Austin for his contributions to number theory.

(more)

The reason I’m linking to lots of other sources is because I don’t understand Milnor’s results very well :-). But it sounds impressive.

[Hat tip: Raynell Cooper]


πhone number

 

Try dialing (253)243-2504. Go ahead. Do it now. It’s free and fun!

Christopher Poole has set up this dedicated phone number and when you call it, an automated voice reads you the digits of π. Very cool :-).

Here’s more info, courtesy of Mike Nathan at Hackaday:

As you well know, today is March 14th – aka “Pi Day”.

Celebrated in math classrooms around the country, this truly is a celebration that belongs to the geeks. Here at Hack-a-Day, we too love Pi day, though we might not outwardly celebrate it with as much gusto as expressed by some of our readers.

[Chris Poole] is one Hack-a-Day fan who knows how to make the most of this mathematical holiday. He has put together a neat SIP-based phone service that reads Pi aloud to anyone who calls. He is running Asterisk in combination with Perl to read off the numbers, and is using a free SIP DID number to accept the calls. We gave it a shot earlier today, and were greeted by a gentle synthesized voice reading off the numbers of Pi. We’re not sure how many digits it is programmed to handle, as we stopped after about 20, so give him a call and let us know how many digits you make it through.

(more)

 

And here’s a direct link to Christopher Poole’s website.

 

Khan Academy

I’ve mentioned Khan Academy before, asking “could your math teacher could be replaced by video?

Here’s Salman Khan’s TED talk from just a few days ago. I simply love this idea. I’ve been using catchupmath.com with a few students, but this seems even larger in scope. It’s extensive, not just limited to math, free and open, and very powerful. I’d really like to try this.

If you haven’t been to Khan Academy yet, you need to go there now. Check out the videos, do some practice problems. I did a bunch, and it was a bit addictive. You even get points and badges!

I’m going to really think about this: can lecture happen outside of class and practice problems happen IN class?