Contents
Rhea Section for MA279: "Modern Mathematics"
Professor Walther, Fall 2013
Welcome!
Please write [[Category:MA279Fall2013Walther]] at the bottom of each of your pages,
OTHERWISE NO CREDIT !
(If you use the "Create a child page" button, this should happen automatically...)
Course Info
- Instructor: Prof. Walther
- Office: MATH 746
- email: walther at math dot purdue
- Office hours: Tue 12:30-1:30, Th 1:30-2:00.
- Class time and location: TTh 9:00-10:15, EE 005
- Book: Excursions in modern mathematics (P. Tannenbaum), 7th edition.
Important Links
Course Related Material
- Course Notes
- Discussion of Homework Problems (Just keep adding to it!)
Discussion
- post link to discussion page here
- post link to discussion page here
Other Links
Your turn! Student Projects
As per the syllabus, 5% of your grade will be based on contributing a Rhea page on a subject related to the course . To pick a subject, simply write your name next to it. Please no more than one student per subject. Your page will be graded based on content as well as interactions with other people (page views, comments/questions on the page, etc.). The number of links to other courses and subjects will also be taken into account: the more the merrier! Please do not simply copy the lecture notes and do not plagiarize. Read Rhea's copyright policy before proceeding.
For some lovely contributions, see Honors Project 2011 by Daniel Lee
Deadline: Sunday before dead week (Dec 1, 2013)
Topic Number | Topic Description | Team Name |
---|---|---|
1 | The electoral college: history, composition, conflicts with plurality (II.B) | Team 6 |
2 | Instant run-off: advantages and problems (I.C) | Name |
3 | Ballots: what is out there? (I.A) | Name |
4 | How does Germany fill its house of representatives? | Team4 |
5 | The plurality vote: must it lead to a 2-party system? | Team 1 |
6 | Presidents (and others) elected against the majority vote (II.C) | Team 13 |
7 | Strategic voting: document existence, motivation, consequences | Name |
8 | The constitutional right of equal vote vs weighted voting: historical events and the Banzhaf power index | Team 9 |
9 | Envy-free fair division, how does one do it? (III.A) | Team 2 |
10 | The 2000 election and what it should teach us (IV.B) | Team (Team 8: Please do not alter the original team's link![| proof]) |
11 | Jefferson vs Hamilton, the US begins (IV.E) | Team 10 |
12 | Constitutionality of Huntington-Hill (ME-1.B) | Name |