Only loony Ancient Greek mathematician (although, there were many loony Ancient Greeks) who loved his maths so much he practically - no wait, he actually did - form a religion around it was Pythagoras and he is 6th to very early 5th century, so I'm assuming I'd be right in saying him?
Hope that helped.
Pythagoras
Pythagorean
pythagoras
Pythagoras
he taught maths :)
They are taught. Perhaps you cut classes when they were.
Euclid: A Greek mathematician known as the "Father of Geometry," Euclid's work in his book "Elements" established the foundation of geometry, including the concept of proofs, algorithms, and mathematical logic. Isaac Newton: The English mathematician and physicist Newton significantly contributed to the development of calculus, his laws of motion, and the mathematical principles of classical mechanics. Carl Friedrich Gauss: The German mathematician Gauss made fundamental contributions to number theory, algebra, and differential geometry. He is also known for inventing the Gaussian distribution, or the bell curve. Pierre-Simon Laplace: The French mathematician Laplace contributed to the fields of celestial mechanics, differential equations, and probability theory. He formulated Laplace's equation and Laplace transforms, among his many achievements. Srinivasa Ramanujan: A self-taught Indian mathematician, Ramanujan made significant contributions to number theory, infinite series, and mathematical analysis. His work on modular functions and partitions revolutionized the field of mathematics.
Current is the flow of electrons in a system usually taught from positive to ground or zero potential. It is defined by the formula current = voltage/resistance Everything has resistance - even wire.
Pythagoras was a Greek mathematician and philosopher who lived in the 6th century BC and is best remembered for the Pythagorean theorem (the square of the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the opposite two sides). Euclid was a Greek mathematician living in the 4th century BC who taught at the university in Alexandria, Egypt. He became known as the Father of Geometry many years after publishing a thirteen volume work called Euclid's Elements in which he compiled and explained all the known mathematics of his time. Euclid's Elements is the world's most famous mathematical work and is also the oldest continuously used mathematical textbook. It is the foundation of the geometry still being taught in schools almost two and one-half millennium after Euclid's death.
Gilbert Labelle , born on June8 , 1944 , is a Canadian mathematician . He taught at the University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM) for 36 years.
Euclid of Alexandria was also known as the Father of Geometry. He was a Greek mathematician and philosopher living in the 4th century BC who taught at the university in Alexandria, Egypt. He became known as the Father of Geometry many years after publishing a thirteen volume work called Euclid's Elements in which he compiled and explained all the known mathematics of his time. Euclid's Elements is the world's most famous mathematical work and is also the oldest continuously used mathematical textbook. It is the foundation of the geometry still being taught in schools almost two and one-half millennium after Euclid's death.
Euclid of Alexandria was also known as the Father of Geometry. He was a Greek mathematician and philosopher living in the 4th century BC who taught at the university in Alexandria, Egypt. He became known as the Father of Geometry many years after publishing a thirteen volume work called Euclid's Elements in which he compiled and explained all the known mathematics of his time. Euclid's Elements is the world's most famous mathematical work and is also the oldest continuously used mathematical textbook. It is the foundation of the geometry still being taught in schools almost two and one-half millennium after Euclid's death.
In The Tau Manifesto, by Michael Hartl, a mathematician and physicist, Hartl asserts that Tau should replace pi in mathematics. He and others state Tau is more perfect than pi, a perfect completion of the circle and more broadly descriptive in mathematical problems, with Tau being double of pi. This idea has not yet been accepted into mainstream mathematics; pi continues to be taught and used.Though proponents of Tau made a "Tau Day" and have produced multi-media to explain the concept, this idea is not about religions, myths, gods, etc. Pi and Tau have no mythical figures or heroic battles. The argument is simply a new mathematical idea, one which may OR may never completely be accepted into mainstream teaching and practices.
Socrates was not taught by any specific teacher but was influenced by the teachings of earlier philosophers such as Anaxagoras and Protagoras. He also engaged in dialogue with his contemporaries and sought knowledge through questioning and critical thinking.