441 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
441 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
From: msb@sq.com (Mark Brader)
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Subject: AFU FAQ archive - pi.indiana
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In the above-cited article, I write:
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> I have a couple of long articles online giving some of the history of
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> the bill and an interpretation of what the author appears to have been
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> thinking; but here is the full text of the bill for what it is worth.
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> I'll send the articles to anyone who asks for them in email, but I
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> don't think they'd be of great interest here.
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Perhaps they would, however, be of sufficient interest to put in the
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archive (if only to forestall future email requests for them!).
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Here they are:
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Article 15233 of sci.math:
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Xref: sq sci.math:15233 soc.history:3911
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Path: sq!geac!torsqnt!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!psuvax1!ukma!ghot
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From: ghot@ms.uky.edu (Allan Adler)
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Newsgroups: sci.math,soc.history
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Subject: Re: Mathematical Scandals
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Message-ID: <1991Mar27.214332.29378@ms.uky.edu>
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Date: 27 Mar 91 21:43:32 GMT
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Sender: ghot@ms.uky.edu (Allan Adler)
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Organization: University Of Kentucky, Dept. of Math Sciences
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Lines: 165
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Lorenzo Sadun paints the legislation of pi = 3 (or 3.14) as reasonable.
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I happen to have in my files a copy of an article by Will E. Edington of
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De Pauw University, entitled
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"House Bill No. 246, Indiana State Legislature, 1897",
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which appeared in the Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. I don't
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happen to have written the year of the article. I vague recall it being
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in the 1950's, but I might be mistaken.
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Edington's article is based on " the bill itself,..., the Journals of the
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House and Senate for 1897, and the files of the three Indianapolis papers
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for January and February, 1897." He also draws on an article of Prof.Waldo
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in the Proc.Indiana Acad.Science in 1916 on the subject.
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The author of the bill was Edwin J. Goodwin, M.D. It was introduced into
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the House by Mr. Taylor I. Record, Representative from Posey County, on
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Jan.18, 1897. The following is the statement of the bill:
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"HOUSE BILL NO. 246
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"A bill for an act introducinga new mathematical truth and offered as a
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contribution to education to be used only by the State of Indiana free of
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cost by paying any royalties whatever on the same, provided it is accepted
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and adopted by the official action of the legislature of 1897.
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"Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Indiana:
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It has been found that a circular area is to the square on a line equal to the
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quadrant of the circumference, as the area of an equilateral rectangle is to
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the square on one side. The diameter employed as the linear unit according to
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the present rule in computing the circle's area is entirely wrong, as it
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represents the circles area one and one-fifths times the area of a square
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whose perimeter is equal to the circumference of the circle. This is because
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one-fifth of the diameter fils to be represented four times in the circle's
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circumference. For example: if we multiply the perimeter of a square by
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one-fourth of any line one-fifth greater than one side, we can, in like
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manner make the square's area to appear one fifth greater than the fact, as
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is done by taking the diameter for the linear unit instead of the quadrant
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of the circle's circumference.
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"Section 2. It is impossible to compute the area of a circle on the
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diameter as the linear unit without tresspassing upon the area outside the
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circle to the extent of including one-fifth more area than is contained within
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the circle's circumference, because the square on the diameter produces the
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side of a square which equals nine when the arc of ninety degrees equals
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eight. By taking the quadrant of the circle's circumference for the linear
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unit, we fulfill the requirements of both quadrature and rectification of
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the circle's circumference. Furthermore, it has revealed the ratio of the
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chord and arc of ninety degrees, which is as seven to eight, and also the
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ratio of the diagonal and one side of a square which is as ten to seven,
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disclosing the fourth important fact, that the ratio of the diameter and
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circumference is as five-fourths to four; and because of these facts and the
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further fact that the rule in prresent use fails to work both ways
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mathematically, it should be discarded as wholly wanting and misleading in
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its practical applications.
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"Section 3. In further proof of the value of the author's proposed
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contribution to education, and offered as a gift to the State of Indiana,
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is the fact of his solutions of the trisection of the angle, duplication of
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the cube and quadrature having been already accepted as contributions to
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science by the American Mathematical Monthly, the leading exponent of
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mathematical thought in this country. And be it remembered that these
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noted problems had been long since given up by scientific bodies as
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unsolvable mysteries and above man's ability to comprehend."
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I think the text of the bill should dispell any illusions as to its
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resasonableness. Note the mention of the American Mathematical Monthly:
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I don't know whether the Monthly actually published what this bill claims.
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If it did, that might be a scandal worthy of Kenton Yee's list.
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Edington describes the fate of the bill in the committees of the Indiana
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legislature. First it was referred to the House Committee on Canals, which was
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also referred to as the Committee on Swamp Lands. Notices of the bill appeared
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in the Indianapolis Journal and the Indianapolis Sentinel on Jan. 19,1897,
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both of which described it a a bill telling how to square circles. On the same
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day, "Representative M.B.Butler, of Steuben County, chairman of the
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Committee on Canals, submitted the following report:
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"Your Committee on Canals, to which was referred House Bill No.246, entitled
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an act for the introduction of a mamthematical truth, etc., has had the same
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under consideration and begs leave to report the same back to the House with
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the recommendation that said bill be referred to the Committee on Education."
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The next day, the following article appeared in the Indianapolis Sentinel:
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"To SQUARE THE CIRCLE
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"Claims Made That This Old Problem Has Been Solved.
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"The bill telling how to square a circle, introduced in the House by
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Mr.Record, is not intended to be a hoax. Mr. Record knows nothing of the bill
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with the exception that he introduced it by request of Dr.Edwin Goodwin of
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Posey County, who is the author of the deomstration. The latter and State
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Superintendent of Public Instruction Geeting believe that it is the long-sought
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solution of the problem, and they are seeking to have it adopted by the
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legislature. Dr. Goodwin, the author, is a mathematician of note. He has it
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copyrighted and his proposition is that if the legislature will indorse the
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solution, he will allow the state to use the demonstration in its textbooks
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free of charge. The author is lobbying for the bill."
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On "February 2, 1897, ...Representative S.E. Nicholson, of Howard County,
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chairman of the Committee on Education, reported to the House.
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"Your Committee on Education, to which was referred House Bill No.246,
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entitled a a bill for an act entitled an act introducing a new mathematical
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truth, has had same under consideration, and begs leave to report the same
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back to the House with the recommendation that said bill do pass.
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"The report was cincurred in, and on February 8,1897, it was brought up for the
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second reading, following which it was considered engrossed. Then
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'Mr. Nicholson moved that the consitutional rule requiring bills to be read
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on three days be suspended, that the bill may be read a third time now.' The
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constitutional rule was suspended by a vote of 72 to 0 and the bill was then
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read a third time. It was passed by a vote of 67 to 0, and the Clerk of the
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House was directed to inform the Senate of the passage of the bill."
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The newspapers reported the suspension of the consitutional rules and
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the unanimous passage of the bill matter-of-factly, except for one line
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in the Indianapolis Journal to the effect that "this is the strangest
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bill that has ever passed an Indiana Assembly."
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The bill was referred to the Senate on Feb.10,1897 and was read for the first
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time on Feb.11 and referred to the Committee on Temperance. "On Feb.12
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Senator Harry S. New, of Marion County, Chairman of the COmmittee on
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Temperance, made the following report to the Senate:
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"Your committee on Temperance, to which was referred House Bill No.246,
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introduced by Mr.Record, has had the same under consideration and begs leave
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to report the same back to the Senate with the recommendation that said bill
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do pass."
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The Senate Journal mentions only that the bill was read a second time on
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Feb.12, 1897, that there was an unsuccessful attempt to amend the bill
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by strike out the enacting clause, and finally it was postponed indefinitely.
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That the bill was killed appears to be a matter of dumb luck rather than the
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superior education or wisdom of the Senate. It is true that the bill was
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widely ridiculed in Indiana and other states, but what actually brought about
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the defeat of the bill is recorded by Prof.C.A.Waldo in an article he wrote
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for the Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science in 1916. The reason
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he knows is that he happened to be at the State Capitol lobbying for the
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appropriation of the Indiana Academy of Science, on the day the Housed passed
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House Bill 246. When he walked in the found the debate on House Bill 246
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already in progress.In his article, he writes (according to Edington):
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"An ex-teacher from the eastern part of the state was saying: 'The case is
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perfectly simple. If we pass this bill which establishes a new and correct
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value for \pi, the author offers to our state without cost the use of his
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discovery and its free publication in our school text books, while everyone
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else must pay him a royalty.' The roll was then called and the bill passed its
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third and final reading in the lower house. A member then showed the writer
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[i.e. Waldo -AA] a copy of the bill just passed and asked him if he would like
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an introduction to the learned doctor, its author. He declined the courtesy
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with thanks remarking that he was acquainted with as many crazy people as he
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cared to know.
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"That evening the senators were properly coached and shortly thereafter as it
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came to its final reading in the upper house they threw out with much
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merriment the epoch making discovery of the Wise Man from the Pocket."
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So much for the bill regarding the value of \pi. Before we laugh too hard
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at the legislature of Indiana or at the state of education in 1897, I think
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we should have a moment of silence as we contemplate what fate the bill
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might have if it were brought up for a referendum today.
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Allan Adler
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ghot@ms.uky.edu
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Article 15360 of sci.math:
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Xref: sq sci.math:15360 soc.history:3971
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Newsgroups: sci.math,soc.history
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Path: sq!msb
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From: msb@sq.sq.com (Mark Brader)
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Subject: Indiana Pi Bill (was: Mathematical Scandals)
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Message-ID: <1991Apr2.021121.11810@sq.sq.com>
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Followup-To: sci.math
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Summary: pi = 3.2; annotated text of bill follows
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Organization: SoftQuad Inc., Toronto, Canada
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References: <1991Mar27.214332.29378@ms.uky.edu> <sadun.670185234@acf9>
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Date: Tue, 2 Apr 91 02:11:21 GMT
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Lines: 227
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This article is cross-posted as part of a cross-posted thread;
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followups are directed to sci.math.
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Before I start I should point out that this topic is in fact covered
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in the master Frequently Asked Questions list -- I wrote the entry there
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-- and that nobody has yet mentioned this. Everyone posting to the net
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should be familiar with this and the other articles that are regularly
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reposted to news.announce.newusers! However, I think it's okay to post
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this article, as it goes into rather more detail than can appear there.
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> ghot@ms.uky.edu (Allan Adler) writes a long and informative article
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> about the 1897 Indiana legislature almost passing a circle-squarer's
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> "corrected" value of pi, and included the text of the bill. I did not
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> know about this bill, and I stand corrected.
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>
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> (BTW, from the text of the bill I couldn't quite figure out what the
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> value of pi was supposed to be. If somebody could sift through
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> the bill and answer that I'd appreciate it.)
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David Singmaster's article (Mathematical Intelligencer, vol. 7 (1985) #2,
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p.69-72), which was mentioned in another posting in this thread, takes
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each mathematical statement in the bill at face value and derives a
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value of pi by comparing it to the truth. I don't think this is fair;
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it seems clear to me that the author's model of the world had more
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deviations from reality than the value of pi. At the end of this
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article I explain why I consider the bill to assign the value 3.2 to pi.
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I posted some information about the affair to the net in about 1985,
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and still have it online. As with Allan Adler's posting, which also
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included the text of the bill, my source for this was Will Edington's
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PIAS article -- I don't have a date either, but a reference in the text
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means that it must have been the second half of 1935 of thereabouts.
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I hadn't read Singmaster's article at the time. Anyway, I have edited
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down most of what I wrote about the story behind the bill, as much of
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it duplicated what Allan posted. I have retained some bits that he
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didn't mention, and some other bits needed for continuity.
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One interesting difference between today's Usenet and those days --
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I originally felt it necessary to post this in three parts because
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of its length!
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(Edited old posting follows.)
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I have been unable to find any reference by Martin Gardner to the
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story, neither in "Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science" nor in
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his Scientific American columns. Gardner did write a column about pi in
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July 1960. I have seen brief references to the story in several places,
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including the Guinness Book of World Records. Frequently these
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references give the *wrong* wrong value of Pi. It was 3.2, not 3 as
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the Bible seems to suggest, nor 4 as Guinness says.
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THE STORY
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The author of the bill was Dr. Edwin J. Goodwin, an M.D., of
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Solitude, Indiana. It seems that he was a crank mathematician.
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He contacted his Representative, one Taylor I. Record, with his
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epoch-making suggestion: if the State would pass an Act recognizing
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his discovery, he would allow all Indiana textbooks to use it without
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paying him a royalty.
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Nobody in the Indiana Legislature knew enough mathematics to know that
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the "discovery" was nonsense. In due course the bill had its third
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House reading, and passed 67-0. At this point the text of the bill
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was published "and, of course, became the target for ridicule",
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"in this and other states".
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By this time a real mathematician, Prof. C. A. Waldo, had learned
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what was going on. In fact, he was present when the bill was read
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on February 5, 1897. ("...imagine [the author's] surprise when he
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discovered that he was in the midst of a debate upon a piece of
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mathematical legislation. An ex-teacher was saying ... 'The case is
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perfectly simple. If we pass this bill which establishes a new and
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correct value for Pi, the author offers ... its free publication in
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our school text books, while everyone else must pay him a royalty'",
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Waldo wrote in a 1916 article.) But the House had passed the bill.
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Fortunately, Indiana has a bicameral legislature. The bill came up
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for first reading in the Senate on Thursday, February 11. Apparently
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in fun, they referred it to the Committee on Temperance. The Committee
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reported back on Friday, February 12, approving the bill, which then
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had its second reading.
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The Indianapolis Journal reported what happened: "The Senators
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made bad puns about it, ridiculed it, and laughed over it. The fun
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lasted half an hour. Senator Hubbell said that it was not meet for
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the Senate, which was costing the State $250 a day [!], to waste its
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time in such frivolity ... He moved the indefinite postponement of
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the bill, and the motion carried. ... All of the senators who
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spoke on the bill admitted that they were ignorant of the merits of
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the proposition. [In the end,] it was simply regarded as not being a
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subject for legislation."
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ANNOTATED TEXT OF THE BILL
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/* Following is the text of Indiana House Bill #246 of 1897, with my
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* own annotations (in comment signs and exdented, like this text).
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* In my annotations, A, r, d, c, and s are respectively the circle's
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* area, radius, diameter, circumference, and the side of the inscribed
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* square. */
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A bill for an act introducing a new mathematical
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truth and offered as a contribution to education to be
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used only by the State of Indiana free of cost by paying
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any royalties whatever on the same, provided it is ac-
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cepted and adopted by the official action of the leg-
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islature of 1897.
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/* You normally have to pay royalties on mathematical truths?
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* The Pythagoras estate must be doing well by now... */
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SECTION 1.
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Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State
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of Indiana: It has been found that a circular area is to
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the square on a line equal to the quadrant of the cir-
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cumference, as the area of an equilateral rectangle is
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to the square on one side.
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/* The part after the last comma is a remarkable way of saying
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* "as 1 is to 1". In other words, this says A = (c/4)^2, which
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* is the same as A = (pi*r/2)^2 = (pi^2/4)*r^2 instead of the
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* actual A = pi*r^2. */
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The diameter employed as the linear
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unit according to the present rule in computing the
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circle's area is entirely wrong, as it represents the
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circle's area one and one-fifth times the area of a
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square whose perimeter is equal to the circumference of
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the circle.
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/* The formula A = pi*r^2 is interpreted as A = d*(c/4), which is correct.
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* The author claims that the d factor should be c/4, so the ratio of
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* the area by the author's formula to the area by the real formula
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* is c/(4*d), that is, pi/4. Since he believes pi = 3.2, this ratio
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* is 3.2/4, which is 4/5. Therefore the area by the author's rule
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* is 1/5 smaller than the actual area. Now he apparently thinks that
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* the reciprocal of 1-1/5 is 1+1/5, and thus that the other area is
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* 1/5 larger than his area, which of course would actually require
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* the ratio to be 5/6. */
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This is because one-fifth of the di-
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ameter fails to be represented four times in the
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circle's circumference.
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/* In other words, c = (1-1/5) * (4*d); consistent with pi = 3.2. */
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For example: if we multiply the per-
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imeter of a square by one-fourth of any line one-fifth
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greater than one side, we can in like manner make the
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square's area to appear one fifth greater than the fact,
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as is done by taking the diameter for the linear unit
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instead of the quadrant of the circle's circumference.
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/* He says that if we consider the area of a square of side x to be
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* (4*x)*(x/4) and we replace the second x by (1+1/5)*x, we get an
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* area 1/5 too large, and this is analogous to using d in place of
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* c/4 with the circle. */
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SECTION 2.
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It is impossible to compute the area of a circle
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on the diameter as the linear unit without tresspassing
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upon the area outside the circle to the extent of in-
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cluding one-fifth more area than is contained within the
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circle's circumference, because the square on the diame-
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ter produces the side of a square which equals nine when
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the arc of ninety degrees equals eight.
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/* I can only assume that "nine" is a mistake for "ten". See also
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* the annotation after the next one. */
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By taking the quadrant of the
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circle's circumference for the linear unit, we fulfill
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the requirements of both quadrature and rectification of
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the circle's circumference.
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/* Getting repetitive here... */
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Furthermore, it has revealed the ra-
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tio of the chord and arc of ninety degrees, which is as
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seven to eight, and also the ratio of the diagonal and
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one side of a square which is as ten to seven, disclos-
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ing the fourth important fact, that the ratio of the di-
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ameter and circumference is as five-fourths to four; and
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because of these facts and the futher fact that the rule
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in present use fails to work both ways mathematically,
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it should be discarded as wholly wanting and misleading
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in its practical applications.
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/* The meat of the bill. He says that s/(c/4) = 7/8, and d/s = 10/7,
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* therefore d/c = (10/7)*(7/8)/4, which he reduces only as far as
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* (5/4)/4. Of course this is 5/16, and gives pi = c/d = 16/5 = 3.2.
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* It also implies that the square root of 2 is 10/7. */
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SECTION 3.
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In further proof of the value of the author's pro-
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posed contribution to education, and offered as a gift
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to the State of Indiana, is the fact of his solutions of
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the trisection of the angle, duplication of the cube and
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quadrature of the circle having been already accepted as
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contributions to science by the American Mathematical
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Monthly, the leading exponent of mathematical thought in
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this country.
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/* When I first posted this I assumed that the A.M.M. must have had a
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* policy of politely acknowledging crankish submissions, but apparently
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* at one time they simply printed whatever they were sent. I haven't
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* checked this out. */
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And be it remembered that these not-
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ed problems had been long since given up by scientific
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bodies as unsolvable mysteries and above man's ability
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to comprehend.
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/* "Given up" is not the same as "proved insoluble"! */
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--
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Mark Brader "Sir, your composure baffles me. A single counter-
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SoftQuad Inc. example refutes a conjecture as effectively as ten.
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Toronto ... Hands up! You have to surrender."
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utzoo!sq!msb, msb@sq.com -- Imre Lakatos
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