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Republic of the Philippines

SORSOGON STATE COLLEGE

BULAN CAMPUS

Bulan, Sorsogon
Nikki Jean Hona

BSAIS I-B
Abstract

This synthesis paper is all about Mathematics helps organize patterns and regularities in the world. Our

world is full of pattern thus we live in the universe of patterns. We can see patterns in many different

ways. Tigers and zebras are covered in pattern of stripes, leopards and hyenas are covered in patterns of

spots. The tiger’s stripes and the hyena’s spots attest to mathematical regularities in biological growth

and form. Patterns possess utility as well as beauty that we can see in nature. By using mathematics to

organize and systematize our ideas about pattern, we have discovered a great secret: nature’s patterns are

not just there to be admired; they are vital clues to the rules that govern natural process. The purpose of

this is to widen the knowledge of an indication that there is always mathematics in almost everything in

this world, Patterns constitute the ultimate story of our world. They’re there to tease us – to tell us that

there’s something we don’t fully understand yet and mathematics is the science of patterns and

relationships.
Communing with nature does all of us good. It remind us of what we are .Painting pictures, sculpting

sculptures, and writing poems are valid and important ways to express our feelings about the world and

about ourselves .one of the strangest Features of the relationship between mathematics and the real word

but also one of the strangest feature of the relationship between mathematics and the “real world”, but

also one of the strongest, is that good mathematics, whatever its source, eventually turns out to be

useful. Mathematics has developed alongside our understanding of nature; each reinforcing the

other .Each of nature’s patterns is a puzzle, nearly always a deep one. Mathematics is brilliant at helping

us to solve puzzles. It is a more or less systematic way of digging out the rules and structures that he

behind some deserved pattern or regularity. Whatever the reasons ,mathematics definitely is a useful

way to think about nature .We want to understand how they happen ,to understand why they happen,

which is different :to organize the underlying patterns and regularities in the most satisfying way.

According to Pavericio, R. (2018) that there is mathematics in almost everything this world .He

example an arrangement or grouping that repeats. Everyone can watch designs thing like hues, shapes,

activities, or different arrangements that repeal-all over. Considers words or tunes is tunes ,lines and

bend on structures ,or even in the markets where boxes and containers of different things are arranged

Nothing in native occurs without a reason .Number Patterns one regular kind of math example is a

number example .Number example kind are a succession of numbers that are requested dependent on a

standard .These are numerous approaches to make sense of the standard ,for example use a number line

to see the separation between the number on what they rehash in a unique way 200k at the last a coupé

of digits or the principal digits to check whether there is an example ,such as taking each number and
duplicating by 3 for example Think about basic number examples, such as rallying by 25,5s ,10s and

additionally. Find the contrast between the numbers. It's critical to recall that a number example can has

more than one arrangement and a mix of standards .If so, attempt to think about the least complex

standards conceivable ,such as including 1 or duplicating by 2 with a distraction of 3. Creatures, for

example, all diary animals, all lions, all canine and every single other creature have divergent highlights.

All mangoes have comparative highlights and shapes. Leaves of a similar tree have comparable example

of shape .The entryways and windows of a house have comparable example. We may scan for

comparable example in arithmetic moreover.

The above-mentioned study emphasize that Mathematics is in every part of the world ,It exist naturally

and mathematics reveals hidden pattern that help us understand the world around us He mentioned also

pattern is a term that typically describes repeating visual object or events and each object is precisely

placed by artist into a static display.

According to Sarukin, J. (2019) He believed that the Patterns constitute the ultimate story of our

world. They’re there to tease us – to tell us that there’s something we don’t fully understand yet. These

patterns represent something greater. They represent the mechanics behind how our universe works and

hold clues invaluable in answering some of life’s most interesting questions. The reason these patterns are

important is because they tell us where to look. If we can’t explain why two completely separate things are

very similar, it shows we don’t fully grasp what’s going on. Only by identifying and grouping these

patterns can we start analyzing and learning about the underlying mechanics governing these systems.

True understanding & comprehension comes when enough dots become connected and you finally see the

big picture. The big world becomes small. Distance vanishes & everything is interconnected. The more

you understand, the more you see these patterns – the more obvious they stand out. The key to

understanding life may be found in understanding these patterns – in relating these disparate subjects and
finding a thread of commonality. If we can understand this stuff, we can control it. We can invent new

things. This is why it’s important to understand these patterns – it gives us the ability to unlock the

universe. You can think of it like cooking a dish of food – you start with simple ingredients, simple rules.

Then you need enough of those simple materials in order create a more complex dish. The combination of

these ingredients creates a new, object of higher order & complexity. Butter + Bread + Cheese = Grilled

Cheese. It’s interesting that all of these systems share similar rules: 1. they’re built from a collection of

lower, simpler “Building Blocks”2. As they evolve & reach pique efficiency – they start to look the

same.3. Any single node can stop functioning, but the overall larger system stays intact. Examples: Cells

make up tissue which make organs which make systems that work together to create humans. Similarly

organized is our universe Suns make up galaxies which together form nebula which work together to

create our universe. Even systems that we’ve created on our own operate with a similar type of

organization and hierarchy: Binary code builds into more complex languages which work together to form

a comprehensive graphical user interface which we call a Computer. Single users sign up and start

following other users to create cohorts which together work in harmony to create a Social network. Not

only do these very different systems all follow a similar logical structure, but they all LOOK the same as

well. The brain is probably the most complex organically evolved that we know. The observable universe

is probably the most complex thing we know exists. Despite being on two completely different scales of

reality – these two things are structured in a remarkably similar way. In addition – a single node can stop

functioning, but the overall system stays intact. If one of your cells dies, your human is still okay. If one

user leaves a social network, it stays alive. One light pole can go out on a electrical grid but the system at

large still works. If one human dies, the larger system of humanity is unaffected. You can lose a sun, or an

entire galaxy and the universe goes unaffected. The Fibonacci sequence is amazing. It’s another one of

these patterns that is omnipresence throughout the universe at different scales of reality. The Fibonacci
sequence is also known as the Golden Ratio. The sequence itself is: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, and 55

and so on to infinity. Each number is the sum of the two numbers that precede it. It’s a simple pattern that

seems to pop up whenever things reach an extreme level of effiency.Another interesting pattern within the

Fibonacci sequence is called The Golden Mean or The Divine Proportion. You reach the golden mean by

taking each number in the series and dividing it by the previous number. At first everything looks normal.

One divided by one is one. Two divided by one is two. Three divided by two is 1.5.As the sequence

increases, an interesting pattern emerges. Five divided by three is 1.666. Eight divided by five is 1.6.

Thirteen divided by eight is 1.625. Twenty-one divided by thirteen is 1.615.As the series continues, the

golden mean approaches the number 1.618 getting increasingly close, but never quite reaching that ratio.

The reason this is interesting is because this number 1.618 is actually found everywhere in works of art,

nature, architecture, and in many systems who’s underlying laws seem to govern our universe. The Greeks

used the 1.618 proportion to construct The Golden Rectangle. It was a rectangle with sides measuring one

and 1.618 (or with side measuring to consecutive Fibonacci Numbers). This was considered the most

mathematically beautiful structure, and frequently used in architecture. Examples of Fibonacci Sequences

in Nature: Hurricane: Egg: Spiral Galaxy: Human Face – Eyes & Mouth: Greek Architecture: Human Arm

Length Ratio: Spiral Shell: Evolution: In general we think of evolution as a process which describes how

we started as little bacteria and ended up as sentient humans.

The forgoing study bears a connection with the topic that I choose since it elucidates the transfer of

a mathematical idea into something idea into something that can be made in a factory or used in a home

generally takes time. Lots of time: a century is not unusual. The pursuance of safe will impoverish us all.

The really important breakthroughs are always unpredictable. It is their very unpredictability that makes

them important: they change our world in ways we didn’t see coming. Moreover, goal- oriented often

runs up against a brick wall, and not only in mathematics. There is nothing wrong with goal oriented as
a way of achieving feasible goals. But the dreamers and the mavericks must be allowed some free rein,

too. Our world is not static: new problems constantly arise, and old answers often stop working. Like

Lewis Carroll’s Red Queen, we must run very fast in order to stand still.

According to American Association for Advancement of science (1990) Mathematics is the science of

patterns and relationships. As a theoretical discipline, mathematics explores the possible relationships

among abstractions without concern for whether those abstractions have counterparts in the real world.

The abstractions can be anything from strings of numbers to geometric figures to sets of equations. In

addressing, say, "Does the interval between prime numbers form a pattern?" as a theoretical question,

mathematicians are interested only in finding a pattern or proving that there is none, but not in what use

such knowledge might have. In deriving, for instance, an expression for the change in the surface area of

any regular solid as its volume approaches zero, mathematicians have no interest in any correspondence

between geometric solids and physical objects in the real world. A central line of investigation in

theoretical mathematics is identifying in each field of study a small set of basic ideas and rules from

which all other interesting ideas and rules in that field can be logically deduced. Mathematicians, like

other scientists, are particularly pleased when previously unrelated parts of mathematics are found to be

derivable from one another, or from some more general theory. Part of the sense of beauty that many

people have perceived in mathematics lies not in finding the greatest elaborateness or complexity but on

the contrary, in finding the greatest economy and simplicity of representation and proof. As mathematics

has progressed, more and more relationships have been found between parts of it that have been

developed separately—for example, between the symbolic representations of algebra and the spatial

representations of geometry. These cross-connections enable insights to be developed into the various

parts; together, they strengthen belief in the correctness and underlying unity of the whole structure.

Mathematics is also an applied science. Many mathematicians focus their attention on solving problems
that originate in the world of experience. They too search for patterns and relationships, and in the

process they use techniques that are similar to those used in doing purely theoretical mathematics. The

difference is largely one of intent. In contrast to theoretical mathematicians, applied mathematicians, in

the examples given above, might study the interval pattern of prime numbers to develop a new system

for coding numerical information, rather than as an abstract problem. Or they might tackle the

area/volume problem as a step in producing a model for the study of crystal behavior. The results of

theoretical and applied mathematics often influence each other. The discoveries of theoretical

mathematicians frequently turn out—sometimes decades later—to have unanticipated practical value.

Studies on the mathematical properties of random events, for example, led to knowledge that later made

it possible to improve the design of experiments in the social and natural sciences. Conversely, in trying

to solve the problem of billing long-distance telephone users fairly, mathematicians made fundamental

discoveries about the mathematics of complex networks. Theoretical mathematics, unlike the other

sciences, is not constrained by the real world, but in the long run it contributes to a better understanding

of that world.

The aforementioned study reinforce with the topic because applications of one part of mathematics

to another-of geometry to analysis, of probability to number theory-provide renewed evidence of the

fundamental unity of mathematics. Despite frequent connections among problems in science and

mathematics, constant discovery of new alliances retains a surprising degree of unpredictability and

serendipity. Whether planned or unplanned, the cross- fertilization between science and mathematics in

problems, theories, and concepts has rarely been greater than it is now, in this last quarter of the

twentieth century.
In this world, people are being molded because of struggles. They become stronger as life throws them

circumstances. Relating it to mathematics, Objects as people, Struggles and circumstances as the

measurements. The problems measure the people how strong they are. The measurement also serves and

a test how firm the object is.The objects that we see in our own precious eyes are made by God and were

developed by Man. To look at the things is very simple and to use those things is very usual. But

appreciating those things is very hard if we don’t know how it is done and what the story behind those

is. Before creating something or inventing object, measurements are very essential. Imagine a car that is

made without proper measurements, it will not function as good as cars that has made with proper

measurements. Every matter is created with blueprints. Blueprint consists side by side measurements

and patterns. Patterns also help in making things one of a kind. It gives illusion to the objects that are

created. Illusion that will make us think how it was made. Just like the World’s most famous portrait

painting of Leonardo da Vinci which is “Monalisa”.Mathematics will stay in our life forever because it

is part of our journey. In relation to Fibonacci sequence which exists first in the Old Generation, it still

exists in ours. The contribution of Fibonacci sequence is very essential by means of having the perfect

measurement in doing something such as paintings, pictures or anything that has something to do with

measurements. Golden ratio is under the Fibonacci sequence and it has also thrown a big impact in our

life. Scientists found the sunflower as the perfect example of something that has a Golden ratio in it. As

people we can’t see what the microscope sees in the sunflower. But when you take a look at the middle

of the sunflower using the microscope, you will see the perfect shape measuring at 1.16814 which is the

so called Golden Ratio. Mathematics will always be in our life. It simply organizes patterns and

regularities in the world by the means of it exist in everything that our eyes see. Our world will not be

formed with the help of mathematics as the source of measuring something that is existing.
References

 Pavericio, R.(2018)How mathematics helps organize patterns and regularities in the world?.

https://brainly.ph/question/1812685

 Sakorin, J. (2018).Patterns: unlocking the universe. https://juliansakorin.com/patterns-unlocking-

the-universe/

 American Association for Advancement of science(1990).The nature of

mathematics.https://www.project2061.org/publications/sfaa/online/chap2.htm

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