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Mathematics in Architecture & Nature

Mathematics is evident in various categories including nature, architecture, arts, and the human body. Patterns in nature can be mathematically modeled with symmetries, trees, spirals, and waves. Mathematics is related to architecture through geometry, spatial forms, and meeting environmental goals. Arts like music, painting, and sculpture contain mathematical elements and have a long history linked to mathematics. Doctors can use differential equations to model organs and processes in the human body, with math describing how the body operates through things like the kidney, heart, temperature regulation, and dopamine.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
110 views1 page

Mathematics in Architecture & Nature

Mathematics is evident in various categories including nature, architecture, arts, and the human body. Patterns in nature can be mathematically modeled with symmetries, trees, spirals, and waves. Mathematics is related to architecture through geometry, spatial forms, and meeting environmental goals. Arts like music, painting, and sculpture contain mathematical elements and have a long history linked to mathematics. Doctors can use differential equations to model organs and processes in the human body, with math describing how the body operates through things like the kidney, heart, temperature regulation, and dopamine.

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nikoy banadora
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MATHEMATICS IN THE MODERN WORLD

(mathematical patterns in various categories)


PATTERNS IN NATURE
In nature patterns of the natural world are evident in regular forms. The patterns
can sometimes be mathematically modeled and include symmetry, trees, spirals,
waves, foams, sprays, and stripes.

The patterns in nature at different levels can be explained in math, physiology,


and chemistry. Patterns in life express the biological mechanisms that underlie
the process. Pattern training studies utilize computer patterns to imitate a broad
range of patterns.

Spirals, meandering, waves, spray, tilting, cracking, and symmetries of rotation


and reflection are the natural patterns. Patterns have a math structure
underneath them; therefore, mathematics can be considered a regularity search,
and the output is a mathematical pattern.

MATHEMATICS IN ARCHITECTURE
Mathematics and architecture are related, since, as with other arts, architects use
mathematics for several reasons. Apart from the mathematics needed when
engineering buildings, architects use geometry: to define the spatial form of a
building; from the Pythagoreans of the sixth century BC onwards, to create forms
considered harmonious, and thus to lay-out buildings and their surroundings
according to mathematical, aesthetic and sometimes religious principles; to
decorate buildings with mathematical objects such as tessellations; and to meet
environmental goals, such as to minimize wind speeds around the bases of tall
buildings.

MATHEMATICS IN ARTS
Art and mathematics are linked in a variety of ways. Mathematics has been
described as a work of art motivated by aesthetics. Music, dance, painting,
architecture, sculpture, and textiles all contain mathematical elements.
Mathematics and art have a long and illustrious history together. So, while the
apparent or real relationship between mathematics and the arts bears down on
concerns of individuation and justification of these disciplines, or in other words,
on pedagogy and the aim of any subject, there are crucial connections between
them as we all draw out.

MATHEMATICS IN THE HUMAN BODY


Doctors, biologists, and physiologists can utilize differential equations to
model and test some of their hypotheses about what's going on. Math
can be used to describe how the body operates, and it can be found not
only in your kidney but also in other organs like your heart.

According to a recent presentation at the American Association for the


Advancement of Science's annual meeting, math specifically graph
theory and the study of nodes in the body could help explain how the
human body regulates everything from temperature to dopamine.

JERICHO T. JERSON
BSGE-1A

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