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FAMOUS MATHEMATICIANS

"Math investigation is about Math. But it is not only about math! I love using new e-tools and learn through a game!

It is a great feeling know that I designed myself  a brand new math-game! Thanks etwinning!"

m.K. Greece

Read the presentation below

and then

play the PacMan math-game

that we designed and created to check yourself!

MATHEMATICS is very much older than History, which begins in +1066, as is well known; for the first mathematician of any note was a Greek named Zeno, who was born in -494, just 1,559 years earlier. Zeno is memorable for proving three theorems: (i) that motion is impossible; (ii) that Achilles can never catch the tortoise (he failed to notice that this follows from his first theorem); and (iii) that half the time may be equal to double the time. This was not considered a very good start by the other Greeks, so they turned their attention to Geometry.

Euclid, about -300, invented Geometry, including Pythagoras' theorem which is how it got the name. He also invented parallel lines, which have really been of more use to railways than to mathematicians. Most people already know more about Euclid than we do.


Archimedes (-286 to -211) is very memorable for taking a bath. Unfortunately he forgot to get dressed afterwards, in spite of his principles.


From this time onward there was an open interval, the other end point of which was Descartes (1596 to 1650), who was divinely inspired to invent analytical geometry, and was once found sitting inside a stove to keep himself warm. He also discovered that he existed, and, moreover, he was able to prove it.
 

Newton (1642 to 1727) was very memorable indeed, chiefly for having just missed living in St. John's. To console himself he invented the Calculus.
 

Newton is also memorable for having been admired by Taylor, who invented Maclaurin's series and admired Newton. However, Taylor lived in St. John's and so was luckier than Newton.
 

The next important mathematician is the Bernoullis. In spite of his having invented numbers, nobody knows how many of him there were, and he lived all over the century. He was called Nicholas, Jacob and John, and one of him was called Daniel.
 

Euler (1707 to 1783), Langrange (1736 to 1813), and Laplace (1749 to 1827) are all famous for inventing equations. Only one of Laplace's equations is well known, but this is enough for anyone. It makes electricity and hydrodynamics much easier for people who don't have to solve it. Euler and Lagrange both went about varying things, which caused the calculus of variations. This was both memorable and regrettable.
 

Gauss invented so many things that it just isn't true. These included the magnetism of the earth, the theory of equations, Cauchy's theorem and the

Cauchy-Riemann equations. In fact, whenever anyone invented anything in the first half of the 19th century, Gauss had invented it twenty years earlier, and was still alive to tell him so. He was born in 1777, died in 1855, and lived all the years in between. He was very memorable, and a good thing.
 

Cauchy's theorem is very important, but is much harder to prove now than it was when Gauss invented it.
 

Lobatchewski (1793 to 1856) must have failed an examination in geometry when he was at school, for he made things harder for everyone by inventing non-Euclidean geometry - just to get his revenge, of course. This was especially bad for the railways, since it made parallel lines so much more difficult.
 

Hamilton (1805 to 1865) was an Irishman . When he had learnt 13 languages before he had left school, he decided that there was no future in this, and look up mathematics. He invented Hamilton's priniciple, the Hamiltonian, the Hamilton-Jacobi theorem, and the Hamilton-Cayley theorem, but not the Hamilton Academicals. Towards the end of his life he also invented quaternions, but nobody except himself ever fell in love with them.
 

Weierstrass (1815 to 1897) is memorable because of Sonja Kowalewski (1850 to 1891), who, of course, is memorable because of Weierstrass. He said that if you put infinitely many things into a small space, some of them would be pretty close together.
 

The most memorable of all mathematicians was John Couch Adams (1819 to 1890). He had the good fortune to live in St. John's, and was named after this society. He discovered Neptune just after Leverrier, and would have discovered it before if the Astronomer Royal had kept his eyes open.
 

Charles Lutwidge Dodgson was a minor Oxford mathematician who must not be confused with Lewis Carroll, whom he impersonated when sending copies of his works to Queen Victoria. They lived contemporaneously.
 

The chief problem treated by Carroll was that of the Cheshire cat. His treatment is essentially unsound, however, since he says: "... this time the cat vanished quite slowly, beginning with the end of the tail, and ending with the grin, which remained some time after the rest of it had gone."* It is obvious that, by the time the tail had disappeared, the cat would be a Manx cat. This is a contradiction, since it was a Cheshire cat, by hypothesis. Carroll also discussed the increased angular velocity of the world if everybody minded his own business.
* Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.


Riemann (1826 to 1866) invented the tensor calculus, and thus caused the theory of relativity.
 

In 1895 Bertrand Russell stated the following theorem: the class of all classes which are not members of themselves is either a member of itself or not. Whichever it is, it is the other. This a contradiction, and the end of mathematics.

 

m.K Greece

 

 

 

Taken from http://www.archim.org.uk/eureka/27/history.html

Math Galery....

 

7 extraordinary mathematicians

by t.z.Schimatari

There are numerous mathematicians who have made significant contributions in the field of mathematics. We cannot argue the mathematical greatness of Euclid, Newton, Gauss, Euler, and others who have set the foundation to the many branches of mathematics. In this post, we learn about 7 extraordinary mathematicians who are quite less known — less known in the sense that they are probably familiar to those who study mathematics and related fields.

 

1. Evariste Galois (1811-1832, France)

Evariste Galois was probably the most unfortunate mathematician who ever lived. He lived during the political turmoil in France. He failed the entrance examinations at Ecole Polytechnique twice because he could not explain his answers, was jailed for six months, and died in a duel at the age of 21.

 

Galois was  ahead of his time. In his teens, he was able to determine necessary and sufficient conditions for algebraic solutions of polynomials to exist. He barely attended college, but most of his contemporaries could not understand his work. He submitted research papers that were either lost or “incomprehensible.”  It was only 14 years after his death that the mathematics community was able to recognize the value of his work.

Despite his short life and his numerous misfortunes, his works gave a firm foundation to group theory.

2. Srivanasa Ramanujan (1887-1920, India)

Srivanasa Ramanujan was a self-taught mathematician who was known for his familiarity with numbers.  At age 13, he read an advanced trigonometry book and independently discovered many proven theorems. At the age of 17,  he independently calculated the Euler’s constant up to 15 decimal places.

When mathematician G.H. Hardy visited him in India when he was ill and told him that he rode a cab numbered 1729, an uninteresting number. Ramanujan replied that it was quite interesting, since is smallest natural number that can be represented  in two different ways as a sum of two positive cubes: .

According to G.H. Hardy, Ramanujan was a genius and in the same league as Euler and Gauss.  In his short life time of 32 years, Ramanujan compiled almost 4000 identities.  He was known for his contributions to number theory, continued fractions, and infinite series.

3. Kurt Gödel (1906-1978, Austria-USA)

Kurt Gödel was a mathematician and logician who was known for the incompleteness theorem, which he published when he was only 25.  The theorem states that no axiomatic system is complete and consistent. In layman’s language, it means that in an axiomatic system, not all mathematical problems can be computed or proved.

Gödel’s incompleteness theorem ended all attempts to find a set of axioms of all mathematics.

4. Paul Erdős (1913-1996, Hungary)

Paul Erdős was one of the most prolific mathematicians of all time (second to   Euler). In his lifetime, he published 1525 mathematical articles and collaborated with 511 mathematicians.

Erdos can be considered as a wandering mathematician. He lived almost like a vagabond with little belongings moving from house to house to collaborate with mathematicians. He would donate his earnings to charity or offer prizes for unsolved problems.

He was known for his works on combinatorics, particularly Ramsey Theory. His  work focused on graph theory, number theory, approximation theory, and set theory.

5. Andrew Wiles (born 1953, United Kingdom)

Andrew Wiles is the rockstar of 21st century mathematicians specializing in number theory.  He is best known for solving the Fermat’s Last Theorem (FLT), a problem that has baffled mathematicians for more than 300 years.  He met the theorem when he was 10 years old. After spending his spare time for 7 years at his attic, he finally solved it in 1995 at the age of 41.

Wiles’ journey in proving the FLT was featured in a BBC documentary.

6. Grigori Perelman (born 1966, Russia)

Grigori Perelman proved the Poincare Conjecture, a problem that was posted in 1904 and was one of the seven Millenium Prize Problems. He is also famous for declining the Clay Millenium Prize (including the $1 million dollars), and the Fields Medal which is considered as the Nobel Prize in Mathematics.

Below are several of Perelman’s arguments why he did not accept the prize.

“I’m not interested in money or fame. I don’t want to be on display like an animal in a zoo. I’m not a hero of mathematics. I’m not even that successful; that is why I don’t want to have everybody looking at me.”

“[the prize] was completely irrelevant for me. Everybody understood that if the proof is correct, then no other recognition is needed.“

Perelman withdrew from the mathematics world in 2003. According to a report in 2006, he was living in St. Petersburg unemployed.

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