Spyke
lemm.ee

Also, all numbers are rational, otherwise they do not make sense

15

as far as the rationals are concerned, this is the same as the number whose square is 2. (ℚ(i) and ℚ(√2) are isomorphic as fields.)

what we can gleam from this is that complete rationality can blur the line between what’s real and what’s imaginary

1

But Pythagoras hated triangles with irrational hypotenuses. A triangle with leg lengths of 3 and 4 units? Beautiful. A triangle with two 1 unit legs? Die

6
lemmy.world

And not a right triangle in sight. I forget, did Pythagoras develop Pythagorean theorem or the law of sines?

5
MxM111reply
kbin.social

Bottom right, the 3x3, 4x4 and 5x5 checker boards forms Pythagorean Triple Triangle.

11
EatYouWellreply
lemmy.world

Well, he popularized it, but the Pythagoran theorem was something ancient civilizations had already figured out.

5
bdkmshrreply
monyet.cc

Documenter that documented their document gets the document credited to documenter

8

It's really just whose discovery spread the fastest. There have been a few instances in history where parallel discoveries happened, but it got named after the guy who got it popularized fastest.

Plus, the records of the civilization that discovered it were lost for a few millenia. But it's not the first thing that's been rediscovered a few times.

2

You reached the end

this meme goes from acute to obtuse real quick | Spyke