Saturday, February 19, 2011

Hernia More Condition_symptoms In Babies

Fibonacci: the Numbers of God



Certe volte accadono delle coincidenze astrali... cerco di spiegarmi:
1) Pi Magna Grecia, il mio mentor in the magical world of mathematics, loaned me a book by Anna Cerasoli which also speaks of the Fibonacci sequence
2) Sybille publish a post on Nature by entering the number above beautiful video

short, two I have keys that open access to what I would describe my personal approach to mathematics. It is not the mathematics that have tried to teach me in school, in which the only joys were the lessons on Euclidean geometry, but ... Math!
So, like when you start looking for something special and appear to us that we had never noticed before, appear here ...

Ma può essere davvero un caso che ci sia una corrispondenza perfetta tra la curva del nostro orecchio e la spirale delle galassie, tra il numero dei petali di un fiore e il rapporto tra le falangi delle nostre dita. Quale probabilità statistica doveva verificarsi perché cose talmente distanti tra loro potessero costruirsi casualmente con questa perfezione razionale?

La serie di Fibonacci fu studiata in tutta la storia della matematica e nel periodo rinascimentale grazie a Keplero se ne scoprì il legame con la sezione aurea. Il rapporto tra due numeri consecutivi della serie di Fibonacci approssima via via the golden number, which in mathematics is called phi.
You know, there is also a virtual museum of the golden section ...
All that is commonly considered Bello has a certain connection with Fibonacci: the Mona Lisa as the Parthenon, the Well-Tempered Clavier of Bach and the perfection of a face.

In the video below you can listen to an explanation in English enough to understand, even for Italian speakers:




Even though this video understandable "written" in English:



Professor of Mathematics, arm pineapple, cabbage, roman, daisies and show the phalanges of the fingers from now, who knows what your students do not begin to love your material ...

PS And then, but you know how many mathematicians were born in Italy? Look at this page and you will know ...

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