Sacred Geometry people are my math heretics— The mad with power inquisition version of me would want them burned at the stake. As it is? I just seethe at their “incorrect appreciation of geometry”

They worship wrong.

I bought a book of geometric constructions — (not reading about it too carefully...) Just cracked it open. It cheerfully gives instructions for constructing a triangle, square, pentagon, hexagon, and heptagon…

A footnote begrudgingly admits the heptagon is only 98.25% correct. 1/

I almost thought that footnote wouldn’t even be there! This book is that glib. The footnote contains the most interesting fact presented in the entire book.

I must compulsively check all these constructions to see if they are “real” they probably are— but still.

I wonder how the heptagon approximation was created— I get the desire to just know how to make a serviceable regular solid— but to talk of heptagons but not unconstructability ? heresy I say!

I wonder how the heptagon approximation was created

💯 I'm wondering too. Answering this would probably require to extend approximation theory, i.e. continued fractions, to arbitrary algebraic fields. Not sure if that should be done ... (or has been done).

@helge @futurebird as a computer-programming-poisoned mind, I'd probably approximate anything trickier than a triangle by repeated bisection of angles using the binary representation of the fraction. You can get that as close as you like if you're patient.

That includes the pentagon, which has an exact construction but I can never remember how to do it.

@petealexharris @helge

But... I like constructions because they are theoretically exact!

But this does kind of expose why including an approximation for a heptagon alongside the traditional exact methods for the other regular polygons (even with a "this is just an approximation" footnote) is... weird and heretical.

@futurebird @helge
I'm not sure I can back this up, but... maybe philosophically speaking *counts* can be exact but *measurements* can't, so lengths and angles aren't really a thing, and even exact compass-and-straightedge constructions are based on axioms that don't make sense in the real world.

So I'm very relaxed about absolutely anything being an approximation, however heretical that is 😀

@petealexharris @futurebird @helge Real compasses and straightedges aren't perfect devices either, for that matter. There's an old joke formula that goes "caring about the heptagon only being 98% accurate but not that the straightedge is only 98% straight is what separates a mathematician from an engineer."