Pythagoras of Samos
Greek Mathematician
Pythagoras is considered by some to be one of the first great mathematicians.
Living around 570 to 495 BC, in modern day Greece, he is known to have founded
the Pythagorean cult, who were noted by Aristotle to be one of the first groups
to actively study and advance mathematics. He is also commonly credited with
the Pythagorean Theorem within trigonometry. However, some sources doubt that
is was him who constructed the proof (Some attribute it to his students, or
Baudhayana, who lived some 300 years earlier in India). Nonetheless, the effect
of such, as with large portions of fundamental mathematics, is commonly felt
today, with the theorem playing a large part in modern measurements and technological
equipment, as well as being the base of a large portion of other areas and
theorems in mathematics. But, unlike most ancient theories, it played a bearing
on the development of geometry, as well as opening the door to the study of
mathematics as a worthwhile endeavor. Thus, he could be called the founding
father of modern mathematics.
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