betazed
Seeking...
- Joined
- May 9, 2003
- Messages
- 5,224
With all this heavy duty philosophic stuff about God and all I thought maybe we can spend some time with something much easier. Math. Believe it or not it is a whole lot easier than grappling with the tenous concepts of philosophy. So here I want all math enthusiasts to mention cool math theorems that everybody can enjoy.
I will start with the morning coffee theorem.
Every morning many of you make take a cup and drink coffee. After you pour the coffee and pour some sugar in it you stir it with a spoon or some other stirrer. Your motions go round and round and create a swirl in the coffee. The intent is to make sure that all parts of the coffee gets stirred and the sugar is evenly distributed throughout. You would be surprised to know that irrespective of how long you keep doing the motion there is always one point in the coffee that has not moved at all. This surprising non-intuitive result is called in mathematics as the Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem (there are many versions of the fixed point theorems but all of them include a continuous map from one set to another set).
The only way to make sure all points have moved is to bring the motion to a stop and then stir again or abruptly change the stirring motion. No regular motion will do.
Do you know of any other cool theorems?
I will start with the morning coffee theorem.

Every morning many of you make take a cup and drink coffee. After you pour the coffee and pour some sugar in it you stir it with a spoon or some other stirrer. Your motions go round and round and create a swirl in the coffee. The intent is to make sure that all parts of the coffee gets stirred and the sugar is evenly distributed throughout. You would be surprised to know that irrespective of how long you keep doing the motion there is always one point in the coffee that has not moved at all. This surprising non-intuitive result is called in mathematics as the Brouwer Fixed Point Theorem (there are many versions of the fixed point theorems but all of them include a continuous map from one set to another set).
The only way to make sure all points have moved is to bring the motion to a stop and then stir again or abruptly change the stirring motion. No regular motion will do.
Do you know of any other cool theorems?