home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!hela.iti.org!usc!news
- From: bruck@mathj.usc.edu (Ronald Bruck)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: Did Gauss ever say ...
- Date: 17 Aug 1992 15:07:03 -0700
- Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
- Lines: 42
- Sender: bruck@mathj.usc.edu (Ronald Bruck)
- Message-ID: <l908o7INN9qs@mathj.usc.edu>
- References: <1992Aug17.172858.3795@hubcap.clemson.edu> <1992Aug17.203632.21234@kth.se>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: mathj.usc.edu
-
- In article <1992Aug17.203632.21234@kth.se> TordM@VanD.PhySto.SE writes:
- >In article <1992Aug17.172858.3795@hubcap.clemson.edu>, steve@hubcap.clemson.edu ("Steve" Stevenson) writes:
- >
- >>Bartlett's Familar Quotations give Gauss credit for the statement
- >>"Mathematics is the queen of the sciences."
- >>I heard anecdotally that he also said "And number theory is the queen
- >>of mathematics."
- >
- > not a reference, but I heard he made the statement "Arithmetics is the Queen
- >of Mathematics"....
- >
-
- From Chapter 1 of "Mathematics, Queen and Servant of Science", by Eric Temple
- Bell, published by the Mathematical Association of America:
-
- Mathematics is Queen of the Sciences and Arithmetic the Queen
- of Mathematics. She often condescends to render service to
- astronomy and other natural sciences, but under all circumstances
- the first place is her due.
-
- So said the master mathematician, astronomer, and physicist C. F.
- Gauss (1777-1855). Whether as history or prophecy, Gauss's declaration
- is far from an overstatement.
-
- (End quote)
-
- Bell doesn't give any references to the quote. (Considering what people
- had to say about Bell in another thread, I'll leave it at that. Bell's
- "Men of Mathematics" introduced me to mathematics as a sophomore in
- high school; prior to reading that book I had no conception that
- mathematics was a **research** area. Similarly, "The New World of Math",
- by George Boehm, casually mentioned in a footnote that "The schools most
- highly rated by mathematicians are: Chicago, Harvard and Princeton." On
- no more evidence than that I made up my mind, while still a sophomore,
- that I would go to the University of Chicago. Books like these can be
- VERY influential on impressionable minds.)
-
- --Ron Bruck
- bruck@mtha.usc.edu preferred
-
-
-
-