![]() |
Pythagoras's theory
Just wondering why this is a theory and not a law, in my eyes implying that it hasn't been proved. I proved it quite a few times at school (well, my maths teacher always gave me ticks for my answers)
Someone got something against him? There must be a simple explanation.:smt017 |
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Isn't everything in physics a theory.
The premise being that in all these test cases X is expected to happend and indeed does. At some future date when X is predicted Y may occur therefore disproving the theory. At which point an amended theory or a completely new one will supersede it. |
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Kinvig is essentially correct...
to shamelessly quote from Wikipedia because i'm late for work: Quote:
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Quote:
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
ooo, is that what the means. :love:
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Because it's a theorem , not a theory.
So it is proven. |
Re: Pythagoras's theory
you folks have waaaayyyyyy too much time on your hands......... lol.
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Quote:
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
As Mac99 said, it is a theorem as opposed to a theory. It's a theorem as opposed to a law because, like all things with maths, it looks complex but has no practical purpose (unless you are a maths teacher).
|
Re: Pythagoras's theory
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:14 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® - Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.