What is a math concept or theorem that you wish there were a better explanation of?
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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
@futurebird I'm sorry if this question is boring but I'm a simpleton.
Can you "fool" pi with a circle that is distinctly a shape with 360 sides? I remember making clocks with LOGO and some of the circle discussions were interesting.
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@futurebird I would like an explanation for why pi goes on forever. Is it evidence we are living in a simulation? Is it because if you trace the circumference of a circle with your finger you never reach a beginning or an end? Is it a message from the gods?
@Meowthias @futurebird if we lived in a simulation, somewhere, somehow, pi would be found to repeat, terminate, or crash the simulation with an unhandled floating point exception.
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@futurebird I'm sorry if this question is boring but I'm a simpleton.
Can you "fool" pi with a circle that is distinctly a shape with 360 sides? I remember making clocks with LOGO and some of the circle discussions were interesting.
Is every regular polygon perimeter-to-radius ratio rational?
If so, then could you show Pi is irrational by solving a polygon, adding another side, then solving it, and adding another side, so the student understands that with infinite sides, the fine adjustments go on forever?
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@futurebird I'm a little nervous that if you explain it in a way that makes sense to my English major brain the universe might get unplugged.
@Meowthias @futurebird I wasn't worried about that... until now


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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
@futurebird @Meowthias I don't think I have much that can help, but I feel like it's important to note that a regular hexagon doesn't have a consistent "diameter" (distance between two opposing corners is not equal to the distance between two opposing sides)
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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
@futurebird @Meowthias To answer the part about running your finger around the circle: despite the fact that pi goes forever, it is clearly bounded above by 3.2 (for example; 3.15 is another bound), so if you move your finger 3.2 diameters around the circumference, you will have gotten back (and past) where you started, no infinities involved.
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Is every regular polygon perimeter-to-radius ratio rational?
If so, then could you show Pi is irrational by solving a polygon, adding another side, then solving it, and adding another side, so the student understands that with infinite sides, the fine adjustments go on forever?
"Is every regular polygon perimeter-to-radius ratio rational?"
Oh no no no. A triangle and a square will produce irrational ratios.
But there are two kinds of irrational numbers. Some can be represented as roots. It makes sense that the root of a square would be the ratio of the diameter of a square to the perimeter... these are numbers that go on forever like pi.
But pi is even more irrational than roots... it can't even be written using roots. It's "transcendental."
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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
@futurebird @Meowthias well polygons are made of straight line segments
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@Meowthias @futurebird I wasn't worried about that... until now


@willyyam @futurebird You should be worried because a few of these have almost made sense.
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@futurebird @Meowthias my theory for a while now, has been that the value of pi is a result of the curvature of space - somewhere else pi might be a whole number
@leadegroot @futurebird @Meowthias While you can find curved spaces in which the ratio of diameter to circumference is different (like exactly 3, or even 4), the definition of pi is that it is the ratio specifically of a circle in a flat space.
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@futurebird I would like an explanation for why pi goes on forever. Is it evidence we are living in a simulation? Is it because if you trace the circumference of a circle with your finger you never reach a beginning or an end? Is it a message from the gods?
It's because we have ten fingers.
That's why we use base 10 numbers. It's also why numbers are called digits.
If we were intelligent sponges, or smart coral, we'd probably see quantities in some less distinct way and wouldn't run into the irrational division results.
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@futurebird I'm sorry if this question is boring but I'm a simpleton.
Can you "fool" pi with a circle that is distinctly a shape with 360 sides? I remember making clocks with LOGO and some of the circle discussions were interesting.
@Gustodon @futurebird A good intuition here is that every polygon with less than infinite sides/vertices can only *approximate* the circle. There will always been a bit more circumference than you can account for with an integer number of sides… and because there is always a tiny bit that can't fit, the decimal representation of pi continues forever.
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"Is every regular polygon perimeter-to-radius ratio rational?"
Oh no no no. A triangle and a square will produce irrational ratios.
But there are two kinds of irrational numbers. Some can be represented as roots. It makes sense that the root of a square would be the ratio of the diameter of a square to the perimeter... these are numbers that go on forever like pi.
But pi is even more irrational than roots... it can't even be written using roots. It's "transcendental."
@futurebird @Phosphenes @Gustodon So, somehow adding more sides transitions in the limit from roots to transcentants?
Doesn't sound like a subject that can be "answered" simply. -
What is a math concept or theorem that you wish there were a better explanation of?
It could be from arithmetic: Why is adding fractions so complicated?
From grade-school algebra: Why does the teacher get so sad and angry if I just √(x²+y²)=x+y
From the calculus: Why do I need to write dx with the integral?
or beyond.
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What is a math concept or theorem that you wish there were a better explanation of?
It could be from arithmetic: Why is adding fractions so complicated?
From grade-school algebra: Why does the teacher get so sad and angry if I just √(x²+y²)=x+y
From the calculus: Why do I need to write dx with the integral?
or beyond.
@futurebird idk what's so complicated about adding fractions? Or substracting them even.
E.g. 49/14-25/10 = (49-25)/(14+10), easy
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@futurebird idk what's so complicated about adding fractions? Or substracting them even.
E.g. 49/14-25/10 = (49-25)/(14+10), easy
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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
Think about the sponges you were posting about a few days ago ...
If they were intelligent they wouldn't use base 10 because they don't have 10 digits (fingers).
Sponges might develop some way of counting quantities that wasn't based on distinct numbers, but was more fluid and could handle irrational division.
We are trapped in our 'digital' world by our own biology!
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Think about the sponges you were posting about a few days ago ...
If they were intelligent they wouldn't use base 10 because they don't have 10 digits (fingers).
Sponges might develop some way of counting quantities that wasn't based on distinct numbers, but was more fluid and could handle irrational division.
We are trapped in our 'digital' world by our own biology!
Pi is still irrational in other bases, though. Because if you have a circle and flatten it out, and you have the diameter of that circle and you make exact copies of these two lengths and lay them side by side one line of diameters and one line of repeated circumferences they will never ever ever ever perfectly match up no matter how many you lay down.
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@leadegroot @futurebird @Meowthias While you can find curved spaces in which the ratio of diameter to circumference is different (like exactly 3, or even 4), the definition of pi is that it is the ratio specifically of a circle in a flat space.
@khleedril @leadegroot @futurebird @Meowthias
So it's a category error, since any time you're experiencing gravity of any strength at all you're within curved space?
Essentially, Pi is not infinite somewhere not influenced by the Great Attractor. *If* space itself isnt curved by nature, which is an open question
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Pi goes on forever because if you take the diameter of a circle and try to wrap it around the circle there is no simple ratio between these lengths.
Now why isn't there a simple ratio? With a hexagon the diameter fits three times. So, why can't exactly three diameters make up the circumference of a circle?
I'm thinking about how to answer this without just going "it's Euclidian space" which isn't a real explanation.
Maybe someone else can help here.
@futurebird
@Meowthias a first, usually non satisfying answer: if you pick a number uniformly between 3 and 4 (which is easy to show that's where pi lives), the probability of landing on a rational number (or even an algebric irrational like sqrt(11) is 0), so for pi to be irrational was very likely. And now I'm trying to think of a more satisfying answer before looking up what others said
