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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sun4nl!tuegate.tue.nl!rw7.urc.tue.nl!wsadjw
- From: wsadjw@rw7.urc.tue.nl (Jan Willem Nienhuys)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: Young Gauss and the arith. series (was: Bell's _Men of Mathematics_)
- Message-ID: <5029@tuegate.tue.nl>
- Date: 12 Aug 92 15:38:16 GMT
- References: <1992Aug9.061134.6536@sq.sq.com> <1992Aug10.151516.28193@tinton.ccur.com> <1992Aug12.103511.4051@kth.se>
- Sender: root@tuegate.tue.nl
- Reply-To: wsadjw@urc.tue.nl
- Organization: Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <1992Aug12.103511.4051@kth.se> TordM@VanD.PhySto.SE writes:
- >
- > as I read it in a volume called "Sigma", which is about 6 books about the
- >mathematical history, the teacher asked the children to add the numbers
- >from 1 to 100, and Gauss wrote the answer down, and handed it to his teacher
- >and said "da liegt es!".
-
- "Ligget sie" (in his dialect). The story goes on that the slate had to be
- put face down, and all the others piled on top in order of arrival.
- All the time little Gauss was sitting quietly waiting intil the last
- pupil was ready. In those days it seems, corporal punishment was quite
- common for boys who had the answer wrong, and acted as smart alecks.
- So as all the slates were turned one by one (with many wrong answers),
- the tension must have mounting . . .
-
- The story, by the way, used to be told by Gauss himself, no written records
- by witnesses exist.
-
- JWM
-