A 20 sided polygonand Copyright for both a Circle and a Wheel by Anthony J. Fejfar,
and Anthony J. Faber, and Neothomism, P.C.,(PA)
The Ancient Greek Mathematician and Philosopher, Euclid, assserted as an assumed postulate, that the interior Angle a Circle is 360 degrees. In fact, Euclid was wrong. The interior Angle of a Circle is 3,600 degrees. The Calculus Math equation for a Circle is x squared plus y squared equal 1. Working inductively, I took a 20 sided polygon, which was placed in a Circle, (See above), and then used the proven postulate that the number of angles in a polygon is the same number as the number of sides. Thus, I then took 20 angles times 179 degrees per angle, which I had previously measured using a protractor, and calculated the sum number of degrees within the Circle, using the 20 sided polygon, to be 3,580 degrees. I then reasonbly estimated that the number of degrees in the interior of a Circle is 3,600 degrees, which would result when a polygon which has one or two more sides is used. For a perfect Circle, however, each angle would be 180 degrees, and the length of the angle would be that of a point. Thus, the real equation for a circle is x squared plus y squared = 1, where the length of each angle in the circle is that of a point, such that a point has the same angle as a straight line, that is, 180 degrees. Additionally, a wheel which is patterned after a Circle also has an interior angle of 3,600 degrees.
(C)Perpetual Copyright and Patent (2011) by Anthony J. Fejfar and Anthony J. Faber and Neothomism, P.C. (PA)

You measured the wrong angles!
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