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Discrete Mathematics Nathan Graf April 23, 2012
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Agenda What is Discrete Mathematics? Combinatorics Number Theory
Mathematical Logic Sets Graphs Class Activity
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Discrete Mathematics Not Continuous Not New Many Mathematical Fields
Key to Computing
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Combinatorics “Pascal’s Triangle” Gambling and Probablility
India (200s BC) Arabs ( s) Gambling and Probablility Cardano (1500s) Fermat and Pascal Leibniz’s De Arte Combinatoria (1666)
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Greek Number Theory Pythagoreans (beginning 6th Century BC)
Number mysteries Figurative Numbers Euclid (350 BC) Divisibility Primes Diophantus - (ca. AD 250) Rational Solutions to Indeterminant Polynomials
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Number Theory Resurgence
"Presurgence" - Fibonacci (early 1200s) Fermat - divisibility, perfect numbers (mid 1600s) Marsenne - primes Euler - proofs of Fermat's theorems (mid 1700s) Gauss Disquisitiones Arithmeticae (1801) Congruence Prime Numbers
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Mathematical Logic Informal Logic - Euclid Calculating Machines
Pascal - Pascaline (1642) Leibniz - Stepped Reckoner (1694) Babbage - Difference/Analytical Engines (1800s) Mathematical Logic Boole, De Morgan (mid 1800s) C.S. Pierce (late 1800s)
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Sets Bolzano (mid 1800s) Dedekind (1888) Cantor (1895)
Provided foundation Paradoxes of the Infinite A Foundation for All Mathematics?
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Graph Theory Euler – Konigsberg Bridge Problem (1735)
Hamilton – Circuits on Polyhedra (1857) Four Color Problem Asked in 1850 Proven in 1976 by computer Modeling Chemical Compounds Modern Usage Computer Programming
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Class Activity Markov Chains Probability/Statistics
Graph Theory to Visualize
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Questions?
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