- #36
lavinia
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Right. Purely algebraic means that the equation can be manipulated to solve for the roots. But it does not guarantee that the roots exist.mathwonk said:manipulated to solve for the roots,\Just a question, re post #27. I don't see why the quadratic formula is purely algebraic. I.e. how does one prove that a square root exists, even for every positive real number, without analysis? e.g. how does one prove sqrt(2) exists without taking a least upper bound?
While I don't know the history, it seems that the Greek mathematicians ,before Archimedes anyway, used compass and straight edge to construct numbers. It wouldn't surprise me if they thought that the rationals were all of the possible numbers before the square root of 2 was constructed as the diagonal of a square.
These constructions seem not to use analysis in the sense of limits and bounds.
Given any number it's square root can be constructed with straight edge and compass.
In particular, ## √b^2-4ac ## can be constructed. So if one can write down a quadratic equation with known coefficients, one can construct the roots. In some sense this is analysis free although still not purely algebraic in the sense of manipulating equations.
Your post makes me wonder if there are generalized methods of construction that produce cube roots and higher order roots.
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