I am not sure there were any negative effects. In fact, it was quite the opposite. After a period of time (the middle ages) when critical thinking was generally discouraged, and education was controlled by a small group of elite churchmen, the Renaissance saw a rebirth of learning and interest in such areas as science, mathematics, art and literature. In fact, most historians believe the Renaissance was a golden age for math and science. There may have been some negative effects, but if there were, they were minor compared to the thrill of the many new discoveries in that era.
The invention of the printing press
Issac Newton became began to use Calculus at this time due to his leading experimentation with physics and his attemp to figure out rate of change
It is a rule in math!
the exponent is a negative
negative.
The invention of the printing press
The invention of the printing press
The creation of new math symbols. [for example: they created the symbols for the square root and for positive(+) and negative(-) numbers.
Math and science. =]
The Renaissance changed math forever because of the revolutionary nature of the discoveries. Leibniz and Newton separately developed calculus, which makes math an infinitely applicable discipline, not just a way of quantifying objects.
Issac Newton became began to use Calculus at this time due to his leading experimentation with physics and his attemp to figure out rate of change
positive is to add and negative is to subtract in math
It is a rule in math!
the exponent is a negative
negative.
negative. why is this question in math when it should be in chemistry?
property of negative exponents