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Wall Streat Journal , April 8,2005 in an otherwise very good review of Dan Rocmore's new book on primes and the Riemann Hypothesis.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/wikividios/primeWSJ.jpg
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/wikividios/primeWSJ.jpg


Wall Streat Journal , April 8,2005 in an otherwise very good review of Dan Rocmore's new book on primes and the Riemann Hypothesis.
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The explanation rests in a mathematical formula created by the baseball analyst Bill James
The explanation rests in a mathematical formula created by the baseball analyst Bill James

Revision as of 15:18, 9 May 2005


Wall Streat Journal , April 8,2005 in an otherwise very good review of Dan Rocmore's new book on primes and the Riemann Hypothesis.

http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/wikividios/primeWSJ.jpg

The explanation rests in a mathematical formula created by the baseball analyst Bill James and introduced in the 1980 Baseball Abstract. James determined that the record of a baseball :team could be approximated by taking the square of team runs scored and dividing it by the square of team runs scored plus the square of team runs allowed. Because of its similarity to the geometric method for determining the sum of the angles in a right triangle, he called it the Pythagorean theorem. - Årron Schatz NYTimes, Jan. 23, 2005.

P.S. Norton Star sent us this picture observed by a student Tosin while walking in New York. Evidently New Yorkers are determined to not forget the quadradic formual:

http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/wikivideos/quadformula.jpg