on Fibonacci in Fibonacci

by on May 26, 2010
in students

1 hey,
1 boy!
2 hey girl!
3 want to play:
5 what do numbers say?
8 do your counting as you’re reading
13 one one two, three five eight, it’s a never-ending game

Comments

3 Responses to “on Fibonacci in Fibonacci”
  1. zuza_her_mother says:

    1 order
    1 exists
    2 in us
    3 in your drawers
    5 with sticky lollipops and dust
    8 of vintage memories filled with my suppressed smiles
    13 or your fizzy cherry coke sayings which sauntered to nyc and back
    21 just to find out there is no room for ideal division equal perspectives no matter which manhattan building we have chosen

  2. benvolio says:

    1
    Numbers.
    1
    Nature.
    2
    Amazing connection.
    3
    It surrounds us.
    5
    It makes our lives ordered.
    8
    It seems to have some influence on everything.
    13
    Imagine the nature without proportions and rules. It does not make any sense.
    21
    Imagine the world without numbers. It is chaotic and confused. You do not know how much you should pay or receive.
    34
    The nature is nothing without numbers. Numbers do not have a sense without the nature. It is an eternal connection and a powerful force. One of them is the key to understand the other.

  3. paris says:

    About a golden ratio?
    A golden ratio is one of the most intriguing inventions of the humankind. Even though it is so important for us – humans, most of people do not know what this quaint ratio is about. Briefly golden ratio is one of the practical uses of Fibonacci’s sequence, a genial discovery of algebra. The discovering of it is dated for XIIth century, when Fibonacci who was a genial Italian mathematics, introduced a totally new sequence, which was able to explain a lot of different phenomenon.
    What is golden ratio used for?
    Golden ratio is used all around the world in many different fields. First and the most easy to spot is architecture. Actually there are a lot of buildings which construction is based on golden ratio. Some studies of the Acropolis, including the Parthenon, conclude that many of its proportions approximate the golden ratio. There are as well some more recent examples. For example French architect Le Corbusier, who is famous for his contribution into modern art.) Golden ratio is also used in other domains. In paintings golden ratio is basically used to indicate the ideal proportions of people’s faces. The ratio was also introduced into music when it is used to describe some of the sounds and voices in mathematical report. The ratio is also used to design a lot of different shapes (for example: credit cards.)
    My opinion on golden ratio?
    I find golden ratio really astonishing. What was even more impressive for me , is that the proportion was discovered at the very begging of our 1000 years and it is still actual and finds a usage in everyday life.

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