On 9/18/05, Robert G. Seeberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> http://physorg.com/news6555.html
> 
> Mathematics students have cause to celebrate. A University of New
> South Wales academic, Dr Norman Wildberger, has rewritten the arcane
> rules of trigonometry and eliminated sines, cosines and tangents from
> the trigonometric toolkit.
> 
> What's more, his simple new framework means calculations can be done
> without trigonometric tables or calculators, yet often with greater
> accuracy.
> 
> Established by the ancient Greeks and Romans, trigonometry is used in
> surveying, navigation, engineering, construction and the sciences to
> calculate the relationships between the sides and vertices of
> triangles.
> 
> "Generations of students have struggled with classical trigonometry
> because the framework is wrong," says Wildberger, whose book is titled
> Divine Proportions: Rational Trigonometry to Universal Geometry (Wild
> Egg books).
> 
> Dr Wildberger has replaced traditional ideas of angles and distance
> with new concepts called "spread" and "quadrance".
> 
> These new concepts mean that trigonometric problems can be done with
> algebra," says Wildberger, an associate professor of mathematics at
> UNSW.
> 
> "Rational trigonometry replaces sines, cosines, tangents and a host of
> other trigonometric functions with elementary arithmetic."
> 
> "For the past two thousand years we have relied on the false
> assumptions that distance is the best way to measure the separation of
> two points, and that angle is the best way to measure the separation
> of two lines.
> 
> "So teachers have resigned themselves to teaching students about
> circles and pi and complicated trigonometric functions that relate
> circular arc lengths to x and y projections – all in order to analyse
> triangles. No wonder students are left scratching their heads," he
> says.
> 
> "But with no alternative to the classical framework, each year
> millions of students memorise the formulas, pass or fail the tests,
> and then promptly forget the unpleasant experience.
> 
> "And we mathematicians wonder why so many people view our beautiful
> subject with distaste bordering on hostility.
> 
> "Now there is a better way. Once you learn the five main rules of
> rational trigonometry and how to simply apply them, you realise that
> classical trigonometry represents a misunderstanding of geometry."
> 
> Wild Egg books: http://wildegg.com/
> Divine Proportions: 
> web.maths.unsw.edu.au/~norman/book.htm<http://web.maths.unsw.edu.au/~norman/book.htm>
> 
> 
> xponent
> Wonders How This Will Affect Power Factor Correction Maru
> rob
> 

Doesn't this scheme make it really hard to calculate distances? 
From the looks of it, it involves a lot of square-rooting.

~Maru
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