Why study math? – The Fibonacci sequence and sexual attractiveness

Oh, that field of mathematics. Don’t you love to hate it? However, you must admit that when someone explains something of the beauty of it to you and you understand it, you marvel at how amazing the field really is.

Such is the case with sequences of numbers and in particular a so-called Fibonacci sequence. For those who don’t know what a sequence is, it is simply a list of numbers that follow some predefined rule. For example, the sequence 2, 4, 6, 8 is the arithmetic sequence that is defined by the multiples of the number 2. The Fibonacci sequence is the following: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13… Do you see the pattern? Well, wait if you don’t; More importantly, or should I say interesting, could I have ever guessed that this sequence has anything to do with sex appeal? By the way. keep reading

If you couldn’t see the pattern within the Fibonacci sequence, it is this: Each successive Fibonacci number after the second is obtained by adding the two previous numbers in the sequence. Thus 3 = 1 + 2, 8 = 3 + 5, etc. Aside from the unusual appearance of these numbers within the realms of nature, such quantities as the number of black and white keys that make up an octave on a standard piano are all Fibonacci numbers, and the number of spirals in the florets of a sunflower head are consecutive Fibonacci numbers; the quotient formed by consecutive numbers in this sequence gets closer and closer to the golden ratio, and this is approximately 1.618.

Classical artists, musicians and architects have been fascinated by this famous number, which seems to have a sex appeal of its own. The ancient Greek sculptor Phidias, who created and oversees the construction of the Parthenon in Athens, is believed to have used this golden rectangle concept on the façade of this famous architectural feat. Luca Pacioli, one of da Vinci’s mathematics teachers, sparked a great interest in the golden ratio in his work De Divina Proportione. Da Vinci used this work to reinforce his claims that various aspects of the human body incorporated this golden ratio. For example, Da Vinci showed that the human face had proportions according to the golden ratio. To show this, Da Vinci traced golden rectangles on the face of an average human subject. It could be assumed that the more golden rectangles that could be drawn, the more aesthetically pleasing a person’s face would be.

Obviously, good looks are associated with an aesthetically attractive face. According to the propositions of Luca Pacioli and Da Vinci, the more the face adheres to the proportions dictated by the golden ratio, the more aesthetically attractive a person will be. Gosh, now math is connected to sex appeal. How strange and curious is this topic! Yes. Sex appeal and mathematics. You have one, you definitely have the other. All these sexy things found inside a sequence of numbers that was probably found by some curious guy who decided to add 1 + 1 to get 2, and then said, hmmm, let’s add 2 + 1 to get 3, and so on. Next thing you know, these numbers appear everywhere, from the piano keyboard to the face of a sunflower to the sex appeal of the human face. Wow, don’t you love math!

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