Learning Module 2
Learning Module 2
Learning Outcomes: At the end of this module, students are able to:
Mathematical Sentence
A correct arrangement of mathematical symbols used to represent a
mathematical symbols that states the complete thought.
MATHEMATICS IN THE MODERN WORLD: Simplified 4
Definition of Terms:
Variable - comes from a Latin word, variābilis, with "vari(us)"' meaning
"various" and "-ābilis"' meaning "-able", meaning "capable of changing"
- It is a symbol, commonly a single letter, that represents a
number, called the value of the variable, which is either arbitrary, not fully
specified, or unknown.
It is a quantity that may change within the context of a mathematical problem
or experiment. The letters x, y, and z are common generic symbols used for variables
The advantage of using variables is that it allows the reader to give temporary
name to what the reader are seeking what value is, so that he can perform concrete
computation with it to determine the possible values.
Variables can be used anywhere an answer is required but not known. It can
be used to find unknown numbers. It can be used to graph equations where you have
two variables. To graph, you would choose various numbers to put into one of
the variables and calculate the other. (https://study.com/academy/lesson. Oct 19, 2015)
Why do we need variables?
You can use a variable expression to describe a real world situation where
one or more quantities have an unknown value or can change in value. To write
a variable expression for a real world situation: Figure out which quantity in the
situation is unknown and define a variable to represent the unknown quantity.
(https://www.ck12.org/book/section.Dec 3, 2015)
First author
Symbol Name Date of earliest use
to use
1360 (approx.),
abbreviation for
+ plus sign
Latin et resembling the
Nicole Oresme
plus sign
1489 (first appearance of
− minus sign
minus sign, and also first
appearance of plus sign
Johannes
Widmann
in print)
MATHEMATICS IN THE MODERN WORLD: Simplified 6
First author
Symbol Name Date of earliest use
to use
1525 (without
√ radical symbol (for square root) the vinculum above
the radicand)
Christoff Rudolff
1595 Bartholomaeus
. decimal separator
Pitiscus
1618 William
× multiplication sign
Oughtred
1628
± plus-minus sign
∷ proportion sign
n
√ radical symbol (for nth root)
1629 Albert Girard
First author
Symbol Name Date of earliest use
to use
1670 (with the horizontal John Wallis
bar over the inequality
≤ unstrict inequality signs (less-
than or equals to and greater-
sign, rather than below it)
William
∝ proportionality sign 1768
Emerson
First author
Symbol Name Date of earliest use
to use
Joseph
⊂ set inclusion signs (subset
1817
Gergonne
of, superset of)
⊃ 1890 Ernst Schröder
Karl
absolute value notation 1841
|...| Weierstrass
determinant of a matrix 1841
Arthur Cayley
‖...‖ matrix notation 1843[1]
∩ intersection
1888
Giuseppe
Peano
∪ union
First author
Symbol Name Date of earliest use
to use
Arnold
∮ contour integral sign 1917
Sommerfeld
Blackboard bold capital Z Edmund
ℤ (for integer numbers set)
1930
Landau
Gerhard
∀ universal quantifier (for all) 1935
Gentzen
1936 (to denote images
Øystein Ore
of specific elements)
→ arrow (for function notation)
1940 (in the present form
Witold Hurewicz
of f: X → Y)
André
∅ empty set sign 1939 Weil / Nicolas
Bourbaki[2]
Blackboard bold capital C Nathan
ℂ (for complex numbers set)
1939
Jacobson
end of proof sign
∎ (a.k.a. tombstone)
1950[3] Paul Halmos
greatest integer ≤
⌊x⌋ x (a.k.a. floor)
1962[4]
Kenneth E.
Iverson
⌈x⌉ smallest integer ≥
x (a.k.a. ceiling)
Sources:
1. Jump up to:a b c "Earliest Uses of Symbols for Matrices and Vectors". jeff560.tripod.com.
Retrieved 18 December 2016.
2. Weil, André (1992), The Apprenticeship of a Mathematician, Springer,
p. 114, ISBN 9783764326500.
3. Halmos, Paul (1950). Measure Theory. New York: Van Nostrand. pp. vi. The symbol ∎ is used
throughout the entire book in place of such phrases as "Q.E.D." or "This completes the proof of the
theorem" to signal the end of a proof.
4. Kenneth E. Iverson (1962), A Programming Language, Wiley, retrieved 20 April 2016
Conditional Statement- if one thing is true, then other things also has to be true.
Contains the word “if-then”
Existential Statement- there is at least one thing for which the property is true.
Example:
1. Any student with a GPA of better than 3.5 must study a lot.
2. If a polygon has 3 sides, it must be a triangle.
3. All real numbers are positive when squared.
4. A girl has got to be crazy to date that guy.
Example:
Are there numbers with the property that the sum of their square equals the
square of their sum.
1. Are there numbers p & q with the property that p2 + q2 =(p+q) 2?,
2. Are there numbers p & q such that p2+ q2 = (p+q) 2
3. Do there exist any numbers p & q such that p2+ q2 = (p+q) 2?.
Existential Universal Statement. It refers to a statement such that the first part
assures that a certain object exists and is universal since its second part says that the
question fulfils a specific property for everything of a specific kind. In mathematics,
we can generate patterns using one or several mathematical operations repeatedly.
As previously discussed in module 1, we follow different patterns on plants, flowers,
animals and other marine species. This module demonstrate the mathematical idea
of how Fibonacci numbers was discovered.
MATHEMATICS IN THE MODERN WORLD: Simplified 12
CHAPTER 2. EXERCISES:
Fill in the blanks using a variables to rewrite the given statement.
References:
1. ONLINE%20TEACHING/MODULE%20MATH%20IN%20THE%20MODERN%
20WORLD/Module%204.pdf
1. https://www.csm.ornl.gov/~sheldon/ds/sec1.6.html
2. https://www.coursehero.com/file/p3r697/10-A-universal-
conditionalstatement-is-a-statement-that-is-both-universal-and/
3. https://www.mathgoodies.com/lessons/vol9/conditional
MATHEMATICS IN THE MODERN WORLD: Simplified 14
1. https://sites.google.com/a/cs.christuniversity.in/1425002-
discretemathematical-structures/unit-i-foundations/c-existential-and-
universalstatements
2. https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2150079/existential-universal-
vsuniversal-existential-quantifiers
3. https://www.coursehero.com/file/p1h0ju6/Universal-Existential-
StatementsThese-statements-are-both-universal-and/
1. cs.unc.edu/~yangk/comp283/slides/1.1_var.pptx
2. http://math.slu.edu/~freeman/Discrete_Lecture_1.pdf