From 2015: Let's Celebrate π!
Today [I wrote 6 years ago] is 3/14/15. On that date, I scheduled this post to appear at 9:26 AM. That echoes the maximum number of digits I can use of π, the most famous irrational number: 3.1415926.... Blogger doesn't allow specification of seconds so I can't get two more digits. Every other year in the century, the digits of π are just echoed by 3/14, not the year. Pi Day is a recent invention so nobody celebrated on 3/14/1592 at 6:53 AM. There weren't very accurate clocks back then anyway.
I don't know if I will bake a pie later today, but that's what is traditional for Pi Day. After all, PIE is not only a homophone for PI but also, as everyone should know, π is the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its radius, and a pie is circular of course. There are many ways to celebrate Pi Day, such as the 3.14 mile race in our town today, with pie served at the end. One participant in the race will be Riley McLincha, a Michigan native who was in the Guinness World Record Book in 1978 for memorizing 7,500 digits of Pi, according to the Ann Arbor News.
More mathematically: after 3.1415926535897, the digits of π go on indefinitely. π is not just irrational (that means it's not able to be expressed as a fraction), but also transcendental (that means it's not "algebraic"). I mention this with apologies to readers among my friends and relatives who already know the math far better than I do. In an op ed in today's New York Times, Manil Suri points out:
"Pi, being the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter, is manifested all around us. For instance, the meandering length of a gently sloping river between source and mouth approaches, on average, pi times its straight-line distance. Pi reminds us that the universe is what it is, that it doesn’t subscribe to our ideas of mathematical convenience."Lots of people have tried to get their minds around the concept. To quote an article titled "The Secret Jewish History of Pi" from yesterday's Forward:
"In an episode of the original 'Star Trek,' Mr. Spock — played by the late, great Jewish actor Leonard Nimoy — commands an evil computer that has taken over the life support system of the Starship Enterprise to compute Pi to the last digit. Spock therefore outwitted the murderous cyborg, which wound up self-destructing, because, as Spock explained, 'the value of Pi is a transcendental figure without resolution.' ...
The great Maimonides: “The ratio of the diameter of the circle and its circumference are unknown and can never be discussed with accuracy,” he wrote in the 12th century. 'This is not a lack of knowledge on our part, as the idiots think, but rather it is that by its nature this thing is unknown, and by virtue of its reality cannot be known, and it is not possible to speak of it … its actual value cannot be perceived.'”And (with more apologies to those in the know) homophone or homonymn is the term for two words that sound alike but are spelled differently: like PI and PIE!
Pi Day Pies from a google image screen capture. |
Miriam's π Shirt and some Thanksgiving pies a few years ago. |
Actually 22 July (22/7) is a better Pi Day on the other 99 years of the century, as well as being my birthday. I always felt kind of transcendental. Hope you eat some pie!
Blog post © 2015, 2021 by mae sander.
To π -day! Have a yummy one on me, please!
ReplyDeleteHappy Pi day! I have a good friend who (pre-pandemic) was part of a group that had an annual Pi day dinner. Everyone had to bring a pie - sweet or savory. It could be pizza pie; quiche; pot piep hand pie, dessert pie -- and what a pot luck it was. I suppose you don't need Pi day to do that -- just not a pandemic!
ReplyDeleteNice repost. Those pies sure look yummy!
ReplyDeleteReally wonderful. The pies look so good.
ReplyDeleteLOVE this repost. I also celebrated Pi day, but not with pie. I had pie a few weeks ago. I'm not really a baker. Glad you are.
ReplyDeleteHappy Pi Day and thanks for the repost! I've just finished making an apple-cherry pie.
ReplyDeleteSuch an interesting post. Hope you enjoyed your pizza.
ReplyDeletegotta love a pie! especially when it is a proper pie with a bottom and top crust but pizza is splendid too. happy Pi day.
ReplyDeleteI remember that Star Trek, Spock is great :)
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