Content about “ history of mathematics
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The fabulous positional system
Chris Hollings reveals that our number system, much used but rarely praised, is in fact a work of genius and took millennia to evolve.
Cantor and Cohen: Infinite investigators part I
Cantor and Cohen: Infinite investigators part II
A glimpse of Cantor's paradise
Peter Macgregor explores the beautiful world of the infinite.
Editorial
Editorial
- Plus 100 —the best maths of the last century
- More maths grads
Outer space: Tally ho!
"Read Euler, read Euler, he is the master of us all."
The death of the lightning calculator
Runner up in the schools category Being good at mental arithmetic isn't going to gain you much street cred these days. But, as Owen Daniel explains, not so long ago it was a sure route to fame and fortune — even if you were a horse.
We must know, we will know
Runner up in the general public category. Great minds spark controversy. This is something you'd expect to hear about a great philosopher or artist, but not about a mathematician. Get ready to bin your stereotypes as Rebecca Morris describes some controversial ideas of the great mathematician David Hilbert.
Gödel and the limits of logic
When Kurt Gödel published his incompleteness theorem in 1931, the mathematical community was stunned: using maths he had proved that there are limits to what maths can prove. This put an end to the hope that all of maths could one day be unified in one elegant theory and had very real implications for computer science. John W Dawson describes Gödel's brilliant work and troubled life.