"As an abstract mathematical function, log maps every positive real number onto a corresponding real number, and maps every product of positive real numbers onto a sum of real numbers. Of course, there can be no table for such a mapping, because it would be infinitely long. But abstractly, such a mapping can be characterized as outlined here. These constraints completely and uniquely determine every possible value of the mapping. But the constraints do not in provide an algorithm for computing such mappings for al1 the real numbers. Approximations to values for real numbers can be made to any degree of accuracy required by doing arithmetic operations on rational numbers." (George Lakoff & Rafael E Nuñez, "Where Mathematics Come From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being", 2000)
"It is intriguing that any of the various new expansions and associated observations relevant to the critical zeros arise from the fi eld of quantum theory, feeding back, as it were, into the study of the Riemann zeta function. But the feedback of which we speak can move in the other direction, as techniques attendant on the Riemann zeta function apply to quantum studies." (Jonathan M Borwein et al, "Computational Strategies for the Riemann Zeta Function", Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics Vol. 121, 2000)
"The equation e^πi =-1 says that the function w= e^z, when applied to the complex number πi as input, yields the real number -1 as the output, the value of w. In the complex plane, πi is the point [0,π) - π on the i-axis. The function w=e^z maps that point, which is in the z-plane, onto the point (-1, 0) - that is, -1 on the x-axis-in the w-plane. […] But its meaning is not given by the values computed for the function w=e^z. Its meaning is conceptual, not numerical. The importance of e^πi =-1 lies in what it tells us about how various branches of mathematics are related to one another - how algebra is related to geometry, geometry to trigonometry, calculus to trigonometry, and how the arithmetic of complex numbers relates to all of them." (George Lakoff & Rafael E Nuñez, "Where Mathematics Come From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being", 2000)
"The role of graphs in probabilistic and statistical modeling is threefold:" (1) to provide convenient means of expressing substantive assumptions;" (2) to facilitate economical representation of joint probability functions; and" (3) to facilitate efficient inferences from observations." (Judea Pearl, "Causality: Models, Reasoning, and Inference", 2000)
"[...] in one of those unexpected connections that make theoretical physics so delightful, the quantum chorology of spectra turns out to be deeply connected to the arithmetic of prime numbers, through the celebrated zeros of the Riemann zeta function: the zeros mimic quantum energy levels of a classically chaotic system. The connection is not only deep but also tantalizing, since its basis is still obscure - though it has been fruitful for both mathematics and physics." (Michael V Berry, "Chaos and the semiclassical limit of Quantum mechanics (is the moon there when somebody looks?)", 2001)
"The double periodicity of the torus is fairly obvious: the circle that goes around the torus in the 'long' direction around the rim, together with the circle that goes around it through the hole in the center. And just as periodic functions can be defined on a circle, doubly periodic functions can be defined on a torus." (John L Casti, "Mathematical Mountaintops: The Five Most Famous Problems of All Time", 2001)
"The fuzzy set theory is taking the same logical approach as what people have been doing with the classical set theory: in the classical set theory, as soon as the two-valued characteristic function has been defined and adopted, rigorous mathematics follows; in the fuzzy set case, as soon as a multi-valued characteristic function" (the membership function) has been chosen and fixed, a rigorous mathematical theory can be fully developed." (Guanrong Chen & Trung Tat Pham, "Introduction to Fuzzy Sets, Fuzzy Logic, and Fuzzy Control Systems", 2001)
"The word 'discrete' means separate or distinct. Mathematicians view it as the opposite of 'continuous'. Whereas, in calculus, it is continuous functions of a real variable that are important, such functions are of relatively little interest in discrete mathematics. Instead of the real numbers, it is the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, ... that play a fundamental role, and it is functions with domain the natural numbers that are often studied." (Edgar G Goodaire & Michael M Parmenter, "Discrete Mathematics with Graph Theory" 2nd Ed., 2002)
"The revelation that the graph appears to climb so smoothly, even though the primes themselves are so unpredictable, is one of the most miraculous in mathematics and represents one of the high points in the story of the primes. On the back page of his book of logarithms, Gauss recorded the discovery of his formula for the number of primes up to N in terms of the logarithm function. Yet despite the importance of the discovery, Gauss told no one what he had found. The most the world heard of his revelation were the cryptic words, 'You have no idea how much poetry there is in a table of logarithms.'" (Marcus du Sautoy, "The Music of the Primes", 2003)
"A game in strategic form is just a function with one input for each player (a strategy) and one output for each player (a payoff). More formally, a game in strategic form is a vector function and its do-main, the strategy space. The strategy space is just the set of all possible combinations of strategies, and therefore incorporates both the player and strategy sets." (David Robinson & David Goforth, "The Topology of the 2×2 Games: A New Periodic Table", 2005)
"Any game in one of the classes can be converted into any other in the same region by some strictly monotonic transformation. Since a monotonic transform conserves order, all the games in an equiva-lence class are ordinally equivalent. These equivalence classes par-tition the 8-dimensional payoff space for the 2 × 2 games into 144 regions. An ordinal 2×2 game is a 2×2 game with a payoff function that maps from the strategy space to these equivalence classes." (David Robinson & David Goforth, "The Topology of the 2×2 Games: A New Periodic Table", 2005)
"In a time of great mathematical ignorance, John Napier made an outstanding contribution through his discovery of the logarithm. Not only did this discovery provide an algorithm that simplified arithmetical computation, but it also presented a transcendental function that has fascinated mathematicians for centuries." (Tucker McElroy, "A to Z of Mathematicians", 2005)
"One important and standardized block of information in the formal descriptions used by game theorists is called a game form. A form specifies the payoffs associated with every possible combination of decisions. There are several widely used forms, including the strate-gic form, typically presented in a matrix, the extensive form, which is usually represented as a tree, and the characteristic function form, expressed as a function on subsets of players." (David Robinson & David Goforth, "The Topology of the 2×2 Games: A New Periodic Table", 2005)
"Since games are characterized by the payoff function, similar games must have similar payoff functions. To define meaningful neigh-bourhoods, we need to characterize the smallest significant change in the payoff function. Obviously a change affecting the payoffs of one player is smaller than a change affecting two players. The clos-est neighbouring games are therefore those games that differ only by a small change in the ordering of the outcomes for one player." (David Robinson & David Goforth, "The Topology of the 2×2 Games: A New Periodic Table", 2005)
"What a wealth of insight Euler’s formula reveals and what delicacy and precision of reasoning it exhibits. It provides a definition of complex exponentiation: It is a definition of complex exponentiation, but the definition proceeds in the most natural way, like a trained singer’s breath. It closes the complex circle once again by guaranteeing that in taking complex numbers to complex powers the mathematician always returns with complex numbers. It justifies the method of infinite series and sums. And it exposes that profound and unsuspected connection between exponential and trigonometric functions; with Euler’s formula the very distinction between trigonometric and exponential functions acquires the shimmer of a desert illusion." (David Berlinski, "Infinite Ascent: A short history of mathematics", 2005)
"A continuous function preserves closeness of points. A discontinuous function maps arbitrarily close points to points that are not close. The precise definition of continuity involves the relation of distance between pairs of points. […] continuity, a property of functions that allows stretching, shrinking, and folding, but preserves the closeness relation among points." (Robert Messer & Philip Straffin, "Topology Now!", 2006)
"A symmetry is a function that preserves what we feel is important about an object." (Avner Ash & Robert Gross, "Fearless Symmetry: Exposing the hidden patterns of numbers", 2006)
"[...] complex functions are actually better behaved than real functions, and the subject of complex analysis is known for its regularity and order, while real analysis is known for wildness and pathology. A smooth complex function is predictable, in the sense that the values of the function in an arbitrarily small region determine its values everywhere. A smooth real function can be completely unpredictable [...]" (John Stillwell, "Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics", 2006)
"Each fuzzy set is uniquely defined by a membership function. […] There are two approaches to determining a membership function. The first approach is to use the knowledge of human experts. Because fuzzy sets are often used to formulate human knowledge, membership functions represent a part of human knowledge. Usually, this approach can only give a rough formula of the membership function and fine-tuning is required. The second approach is to use data collected from various sensors to determine the membership function. Specifically, we first specify the structure of membership function and then fine-tune the parameters of membership function based on the data." (Huaguang Zhang & Derong Liu, "Fuzzy Modeling and Fuzzy Control", 2006)
"Intuitively, two spaces that are homeomorphic have the same general shape in spite of possible deformations of distance and angle. Thus, if two spaces are not homeomorphic, they will tend to look distinctly different. Our job is to specify the difference. To do this rigorously, we need to define some property of topological spaces and show that the property is preserved under transformations by any homeomorphism. Then if one space has the property and the other one does not have the property, there is no way they can be homeomorphic." (Robert Messer & Philip Straffin, "Topology Now!", 2006)
"Lie groups turn up when we study a geometric object with a lot of symmetry, such as a sphere, a circle, or flat spacetime. Because there is so much symmetry, there are many functions from the object to itself that preserve the geometry, and these functions become the elements of the group." (Avner Ash & Robert Gross, "Fearless Symmetry: Exposing the hidden patterns of numbers", 2006)
"Moonshine forms a way of explaining the mysterious connection between the monster finite group and modular functions from classical number theory. The theory has evolved to describe the relationship between finite groups, modular forms and vertex operator algebras." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine is interested in the correlation functions of a class of extremely symmetrical and well-behaved quantum field theories called rational conformal field theories - these theories are so special that their correlation functions can be computed exactly and perturbation is not required." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine is profoundly connected with physics (namely conformal field theory and string theory). String theory proposes that the elementary particles (electrons, photons, quarks, etc.) are vibrational modes on a string of length about 10^−33 cm. These strings can interact only by splitting apart or joining together – as they evolve through time, these (classical) strings will trace out a surface called the world-sheet. Quantum field theory tells us that the quantum quantities of interest (amplitudes) can be perturbatively computed as weighted averages taken over spaces of these world-sheets. Conformally equivalent world-sheets should be identified, so we are led to interpret amplitudes as certain integrals over moduli spaces of surfaces. This approach to string theory leads to a conformally invariant quantum field theory on two-dimensional space-time, called conformal field theory (CFT). The various modular forms and functions arising in Moonshine appear as integrands in some of these genus-1 (‘1-loop’) amplitudes: hence their modularity is manifest." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Since the ellipse is a closed curve it has a total length, λ say, and therefore f(l + λ) = f(l). The elliptic function f is periodic, with 'period' λ, just as the sine function is periodic with period 2π. However, as Gauss discovered in 1797, elliptic functions are even more interesting than this: they have a second, complex period. This discovery completely changed the face of calculus, by showing that some functions should be viewed as functions on the plane of complex numbers. And just as periodic functions on the line can be regarded as functions on a periodic line - that is, on the circle - elliptic functions can be regarded as functions on a doubly periodic plane - that is, on a 2-torus." (John Stillwell, "Yearning for the impossible: the surpnsing truths of mathematics", 2006)
"The appeal of Monstrous Moonshine lies in its mysteriousness: it unexpectedly associates various special modular functions with the Monster, even though modular functions and elements of Mare conceptually incommensurable. Now, ‘understanding’ something means to embed it naturally into a broader context. Why is the sky blue? Because of the way light scatters in gases. Why does light scatter in gases the way it does? Because of Maxwell’s equations. In order to understand Monstrous Moonshine, to resolve the mystery, we should search for similar phenomena, and fit them all into the same story." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"The definition of homeomorphism was motivated by the idea of preserving the general shape or configuration of a geometric figure. Since path components are significant characteristics of a space, it is certainly reasonable that a homeomorphism will preserve the decomposition of a space into path components. […] Suppose we are given two geometric figures that we suspect are not topologically equivalent. If both of the figures are path-connected, counting components will not distinguish the spaces. However, we might be able to remove a special subset of one of the figures and count the number of components of the remainder. If no comparable set can be removed from the other space to leave the same number of components, we will then know that the two spaces are not homeomorphic." (Robert Messer & Philip Straffin, "Topology Now!", 2006)
"The easiest way to show two figures are homeomorphic is often to construct an explicit homeomorphism between them. But what if two figures are not homeomorphic? Surely we cannot be expected to check every function between the sets and show that it is not a homeomorphism. One of the goals of the field of topology is to discover easier ways of detecting the differences between spaces that are not homeomorphic." (Robert Messer & Philip Straffin, "Topology Now!", 2006)
"The Simplicial Approximation Theorem is a concise statement of the general result for functions between any two triangulated spaces. It says that on a suitable subdivision of the domain, any continuous function can be homotopically deformed by an arbitrarily small amount so that the modified function sends vertices to vertices and is linear on each edge, face, tetrahedron, and higher-dimensional cell of the triangulation." (Robert Messer & Philip Straffin, "Topology Now!", 2006)
"Linear algebra is a very useful subject, and its basic concepts arose and were used in different areas of mathematics and its applications. It is therefore not surprising that the subject had its roots in such diverse fields as number theory (both elementary and algebraic), geometry, abstract algebra (groups, rings, fields, Galois theory), anal ysis (differential equations, integral equations, and functional analysis), and physics. Among the elementary concepts of linear algebra are linear equations, matrices, determinants, linear transformations, linear independence, dimension, bilinear forms, quadratic forms, and vector spaces. Since these concepts are closely interconnected, several usually appear in a given context (e.g., linear equations and matrices) and it is often impossible to disengage them." (Israel Kleiner, "A History of Abstract Algebra", 2007)
"Number-theoretic equivalences of the Riemann hypothesis provide a natural method of explaining the hypothesis to nonmathematicians without appealing to complex analysis. While it is unlikely that any of these equivalences will lead directly to a solution, they provide a sense of how intricately the Riemann zeta function is tied to the primes" (Peter Borwein et al, "The Riemann Hypothesis: A Resource for the Afficionado and Virtuoso Alike", 2007)
"One of the current ideas regarding the Riemann hypothesis is that the zeros of the zeta function can be interpreted as eigenvalues of certain matrices. This line of thinking is attractive and is potentially a good way to attack the hypothesis, since it gives a possible connection to physical phenomena. [...] Empirical results indicate that the zeros of the Riemann zeta function are indeed distributed like the eigenvalues of certain matrix ensembles, in particular the Gaussian unitary ensemble. This suggests that random matrix theory might provide an avenue for the proof of the Riemann hypothesis." (Peter Borwein et al, "The Riemann Hypothesis: A Resource for the Afficionado and Virtuoso Alike", 2007)
"The idea of Morse theory is that the topology/geometry of a manifold can be understood by examining the smooth functions (and their singularities) on that manifold." (Steven G Krantz, "The Proof is in the Pudding", 2007))
"Riemann had found a passageway from the familiar world of numbers into a mathematics which would have seemed utterly alien to the Greeks who had studied prime numbers two thousand years before. He had innocently mixed imaginary numbers with his zeta function and discovered, like some mathematical alchemist, the mathematical treasure emerging from this admixture of elements that generations had been searching for. He had crammed his ideas into a ten-page paper, but was fully aware that his ideas would open up radically new vistas on the primes. (Marcus du Sautoy, "Symmetry: A Journey into the Patterns of Nature", 2008)
"[...] the use of complex numbers reveals a connection between the exponential, or power function and the seemingly unrelated trigonometric functions. Without passing through the portal offered by the square root of minus one, the connection may be glimpsed, but not understood. The so-called hyperbolic functions arise from taking what are known as the even and odd parts of the exponential function." (Peter M Higgins, "Number Story: From Counting to Cryptography", 2008)
"To understand, how noise is related to scale-freeness, we have to do some mathematics again. Noise is usually characterized by a mathematical trick. The seemingly random fluctuation of the signal is regarded as a sum of sinusoidal waves. The components of the million waves giving the final noise structure are characterized by their frequency. To describe noise, we plot the contribution (called spectral density) of the various waves we use to model the noise as a function of their frequency. This transformation is called a Fourier transformation [...]" (Péter Csermely, "Weak Links: The Universal Key to the Stabilityof Networks and Complex Systems", 2009)