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- Path: sparky!uunet!dtix!darwin.sura.net!tulane!uflorida!usf.edu!darwin!mccolm
- From: mccolm@darwin.math.usf.edu. (Gregory McColm)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: Well-known people who majored in math (other than mathematicians)
- Message-ID: <1992Oct28.183222.9321@ariel.ec.usf.edu>
- Date: 28 Oct 92 18:32:22 GMT
- References: <1992Oct8.191230.16442@lehi3b15.CSEE.Lehigh.EDU> <81909@ut-emx.uucp> <1992Oct20.090735.11632@infodev.cam.ac.uk>
- Sender: news@ariel.ec.usf.edu (News Admin)
- Organization: Univ. of South Florida, Math Department
- Lines: 27
-
- In article <1992Oct20.090735.11632@infodev.cam.ac.uk> rgep@emu.pmms.cam.ac.uk (Richard Pinch) writes:
- >In article <81909@ut-emx.uucp> tim@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu writes:
- >>
- >>Hmm, Mr. Khayyam died in 1123 AD, several years before the first university
- >>was founded at Oxford. I wonder where one could major in math back in those
- >>times, particularly in Persia.
- >>
- >Oh dear. The University of Oxford was not even the first university
- >in Europe, let alone in the world. The Islamic countries had a much
- >higher standard of learning than Europe in the 12th century: they had
- >[...]
-
-
- I was under the impression that the oldest university-like
- institution was Plato's Academy, which was similar to that,
- er, cult that Pythagoras had set up in South Italy. The
- oldest university---according to some undergrad texts---was
- the Museum at Alexandria.
-
- But were there universities in Medieval Islam? I thought
- that it was like pre-Academy Greece, with various "enlightened
- monarchs" setting up large courts inhabited by painters,
- writers, astrologers, theologians, and the like. Certainly,
- that was the environment that Khayyam lived in----a world
- closer politically to Mozart's than to Newton's.
-
- -----Greg McColm
-