History of Mathematics
393,918 Followers
Recent papers in History of Mathematics
Thomas Hardy’s Wessex novels move in circles: characters retrace their steps, and history repeats itself. The limited geography registers and reflects both movements. At the same time, the novels repeatedly figure choice as binary—limited... more
Many have argued that Plato’s intermediates are not independent entities. Rather, they exemplify the incapacity of discursive thought (διάνοια) for cognizing Forms. But just what does this incapacity consist in? Any successful answer will... more
A selection of some of Novalis’s most important reflections on mathematics from the years 1798-1800. Introduced and translated into English by David W. Wood. In: Symphilosophie: International Journal of Philosophical Romanticism 3... more
This short article is the continuation of the “A Sumerian Numerical Palimpsest” where it is tried to find if the nomenclature of Sumerian numerals appears to be the result of the use of hand(s) for counting. That Sumerian counting in... more
David W. Wood. Book Review of Rudolf Steiner, The Fourth Dimension. Sacred Geometry, Alchemy, and Mathematics (trans. Catherine E. Creeger, Anthroposophic Press, 2001). Review originally published in the Newsletter of the Science Group... more
The article discusses the handwritten revisions and drawn additions by Albrecht Dürer in his own copy of the treatise on geometry, Underweysung der Messung (1525). Situating Dürer’s interest in mathematics within the scholarly milieu of... more
Nel secolo dei Lumi spicca il nome di Maria Gaetana Agnesi nelle discussioni sulla validità delle teorie newtoniane, sul calcolo infinitesimale di Leibniz e Newton, sull'istruzione femminile e sul ruolo della donna nell'indagine... more
Giordano Bruno and the Geometry of Language brings to the fore a sixteenth-century philosopher's role in early modern Europe as a bridge between science and literature, or more specifically, between the spatial paradigm of geometry and... more
Colin Maclaurin (1698-1746) was appointed professor of mathematics at the University of Edinburgh at the recommendation of Isaac Newton. He died at the early age of 48 as a result of his exertions resisting the Jacobite rebellion in... more
We investigate the treatment of fractions in Russell’s 1919 classic Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy. In contrast to rational numbers, every fraction has an integral numerator and a non-zero integral denominator, but usage varies... more
God is a mathematician and He loves doing it by the numbers. Your future is tomorrow and your past we can not find and today you learn; so your future will be secure in the hands of an amazing God, but all this would not be without... more
Este volume, resultado de um trabalho desenvolvido juntamente com o grupo de estudos em pesquisa HEEMa (História e Epistemologia na Educação Matemática/PUCSP), aborda a a relação entre música e matemática, privilegiando os contextos de... more
An investigative attempt at explaining Euclid's first definition in the "Elements," and answering the question "what is a point"? I assert that a point is an indefinitely small quantity of space, and thus can "have no part" because it is... more
Vers la fin du 19e siècle, les mathématiciens et ingénieurs qui travaillent pour l'artillerie n'ont plus d'espoir de trouver une loi élémentaire de la résistance de l'air, ni de parvenir à une intégration analytique exacte des équations... more
The first half of the 20th century in the history of Russian mathematics is striking with a combination of dramaticism, sometimes a tragedy, and outstanding achievements. The paper is devoted to St. Petersburg-Leningrad Mathematical... more
A raiz quadrada de -1 tem uma história que pode ser dita complexa
This is the ultimate proof that the Prime Numbers are not Random Numbers as famous Mathematicians believe and claim publicly through presentations you can find on U Tube Any pupil around the world and a wide public will understand the... more
Abstract: The Hakluyt Society (founded in 1846) is the premier English historical society when it comes to the Age of Discovery. Its 2 volume Hakluyt Handbook is a comprehensive guide, first proposed by Dr. R. A. Skelton and Professor... more
"Just as Grant Wood portrayed Parson Weems pulling the curtain back on the life of George Washington, we shall illuminate Washington's mathematical education. We are blessed with 179 pages of handwritten manuscript in Washington's... more
Available as PDF or plain TXT: computer−generated list of all regular sexagesimal numbers with up to 30 digits in Babylonian floating notation.
We aimed to describe how history of mathematics was framed in teacher education programs to be used by pre-service elementary mathematics teachers in their future teaching within the context of a specific undergraduate course named... more
Mit Laugiers Urhütte wurden die zeitgenössischen Entwurfsmethoden bezüglich ihres Anspruchs zur totalen Dynamisierung des architektonischen Entwurfsprozesses kritisch beurteilt. Wie ist diese Dynamik als rein rationalisierte Form... more
The doxography for Anaximander’s account of the rings of the sky gives proportions for them that are discrepant. So a widely accepted hypothesis proposes that, since the circles of the celestial bodies are compared to wheels, we should... more
Review of "Concinnitas" (2014), a portfolio of ten aquatints by noted mathematicians and physicists including Michael Atiyah, Enrico Bombieri, Stephen Smale, Murray Gell-Mann, David Mumford, Steven Weinberg, Simon Donaldson, Richard Karp,... more
In this paper, we examine Abel’s 1824 proof of the insolubility (in radicals) of the general polynomial of degree five. We give a precise description of what his proof establishes and what is does or does not imply, and we give a sense of... more
This paper reviews contemporary interpretations of classical Greek geometry, and offers a Deleuzian, post structural alternative. We emphasize the embodied aspect of Greek mathematical practice, and indicate how it conflicts with ideal... more
The mean value theorem IS the most important theorem in calculus and it should be rightly called the fundamental theorem of calculus because the theorem known by the same name is derived in one step from the mean value theorem. The mvt... more