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  • Using the Cartesian Plane to Understand the Symmetry of Native American Art Works

    Using the Cartesian Plane to Understand the Symmetry of Native American Art Works

    The need to describe the position of a fly on his bedroom ceiling drove René Descartes to create the Cartesian plane. This invention can help us understand the symmetry in Native American Art work.

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  • Why Average is Great!

    Why Average is Great!

    The concept of average is a very useful one. Those who understand it can make sense of the world. Those who don’t can be easily mislead. What an average number means Say you are told that an NBA shooting guard has an average of 20 points per game for the 6 games he has played…

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  • What do mathematicians do?

    What do mathematicians do?

    “What do mathematicians do?” This is a question I often get asked by my students. In this post, I will give one example of something that a mathematician did that eventually changed the world! The citizens and their problem! The year was 1735 and the people of Königsberg, a city in Central Europe that is…

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  • How many handshakes?

    How many handshakes?

    Fifty people enter a room. If each wants to shake the hand of every other person once, how many handshakes will take place? This problem is a classic of mathematics and we will solve it with the help of some visuals.

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  • Don’t trust your intuition. Part 2: How to win a car on a game show?

    Don’t trust your intuition. Part 2: How to win a car on a game show?

    The Monty Hall Problem is a problem that comes from a segment of the TV game show, Let’s Make a Deal, once hosted by presenter Monty Hall. The game, in its mathematically tidy version, goes like this: There are three closed doors. Behind one of them is a car. Behind the other two is a…

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  • Don’t trust your intuition. Part 1: How many batting lineups for a cricket team?

    Don’t trust your intuition. Part 1: How many batting lineups for a cricket team?

    In the game of cricket, two teams take turns to bat or bowl. While only some players bowl, all eleven team members take part in batting. The bowling team aims to dismiss batters, one at a time, and the batting team sends out a replacement, in predetermined order, for each dismissed player. The order in…

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  • The Secret Mathematical Lives of Rabbits

    The Secret Mathematical Lives of Rabbits

    In 1202, an Italian mathematician, best known as Fibonacci, proposed the following problem: Table 1 below illustrates the development of the rabbit population in the first 6 months. The small rabbit pairs are ones that are less than a month old. We can see that, in February, we have the same original pair. It has…

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Numbers for Words people is a blog that explains mathematics in plain language. The aim is to show the beauty of mathematics from first principles. For regular updates, subscribe by typing your email address in the box at the top of the page.
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