"Let us subjugate a collection of objects taking into account their qualities and differences each from another, then we are lead, in our mathematical perspective, to the study of integers and their connecting operations, that is, we are lead to Number Theory. [...] If we, however, disregard the qualities of each individual object and only account for the difference between two objects insofar that they are different, then we are lead to investigations which are concerned with the position, the order, the choosing of these objects. This branch of mathematics is called Combinatorics." (Eugen Netto, "Lehrbuch der Combinatorik", 1901)
"To facilitate eyeless observation of his sense-transcending world, the mathematician invokes the aid of physical diagrams and physical symbols in endless variety and combination [...]" (Cassius J Keyser, "Lectures on Science, Philosophy and Art", 1907-1908, 1908)
"What, in fact, is mathematical discovery? It does not consist in making new combinations with mathematical entities that are already known. That can be done by anyone, and the combinations that could be so formed would be infinite in number, and the greater part of them would be absolutely devoid of interest. Discovery consists precisely in not constructing useless combinations, but in constructing those that are useful, which are an infinitely small minority. Discovery is discernment, selection." (Henri Poincaré, "Science and Method", 1908)
"In a mathematical sense, space is manifoldness, or combination of numbers. Physical space is known as the 3-dimension system. There is the 4-dimension system, there is the 10-dimension system." (Charles P Steinmetz, [New York Times interview] 1911)
"The Combinatorial Analysis, as it was understood up to the end of the 18th century, was of limited scope and restricted application. [...] Writers on the subject seemed to recognize fully that it was in need of cultivation, that it was of much service in facilitating algebraical operations of all kinds, and that it was the fundamental method of investigation in the theory of Probabilities." (Percy A MacMahon, "Combinatorial Analysis", Encyclopædia Britannica 11th Ed., 1911)
"The game of chess has always fascinated mathematicians, and there is reason to suppose that the possession of great powers of playing that game is in many features very much like the possession of great mathematical ability. There are the different pieces to learn, the pawns, the knights, the bishops, the castles, and the queen and king. The board possesses certain possible combinations of squares, as in rows, diagonals, etc. The pieces are subject to certain rules by which their motions are governed, and there are other rules governing the players. [...] One has only to increase the number of pieces, to enlarge the field of the board, and to produce new rules which are to govern either the pieces or the player, to have a pretty good idea of what mathematics consists." (James B Shaw, "What is Mathematics?", Bulletin American Mathematical Society Vol. 18, 1912)
"The combinatory analysis as considered in this work occupies the ground between algebra, properly so called, and the higher arithmetic. The methods employed are distinctly algebraical and not arithmetical. The essential connecting link between algebra and arithmetic is found in the circumstance that a particular case of algebraic multiplication involves arithmetical addition. [...] This link was forged by Euler for use in the theory of partitions of numbers. It is used here for the most general theory of combinations of which the partition of numbers is a particular case." (Percy A MacMahon, "Combinatory Analysis" Vol. 1, 1915)
"The theory of the partition of numbers belongs partly to algebra and partly to the higher arithmetic. The former aspect is treated here. It is remarkable that in the international organization of the subject-matter of mathematics ‘Partitions’ is considered to be a part of the Theory of Numbers which is an alternative name for the Higher Arithmetic, whereas it is essentially a subdivision of Combinatory Analysis which is not considered to be within the purview of the Theory of Numbers. The fact is that up to the point of determining the real and enumerating Generating Functions the theory is essentially algebraical [..]" (Percy A MacMahon, "Combinatory Analysis" Vol. 1, 1915)
"Combinatory Analysis is well known even to students of elementary algebra, where it figures under the title of Permutations and Combinations; while in theory of equation the subject is intimately connected with symmetric functions. The formal statement of the objects of this branch of mathematics is that it includes the formation, enumeration, and other properties of the different groups of a finite number of elements which are arranged according to prescribed laws. By its subject-matter combinatory analysis is related to some of the most ancient problems which have exercised human ingenuity." (Percy A MacMahon, "Review on 'Combinatory Analysis'", Science Progress in the Twentieth Century Vol. 10 (40), 1916)
"One of the four grand divisions of what may be called properly static mathematics is the theory of configurations. It includes the construction out of given elements of compound forms under certain given conditions or restrictions [...] These constructions vary from the mere permutation of a linear series of elements up to the complicated trees of chemical combinations studied by Cayley, and in general to all sorts of problems in what has been happily denominated tactics by Cayley, or syntactics by Cournot. [...] The study of configurations usually begins with combinatory analysis. By this is usually meant the study of arrangements along a line of a collection of objects, either as individuals or in groups; arrangements at the nodes of a lattice, combinations of arrangements. Such problems arise not only as matters of tactic, curious problems or puzzles, but in the determination of the number of such arrangements needed in solving problems in the theory of probabilities." (James B Shaw, "Review on 'Combinatory Analysis'", Science Vol. 45 (1165), 1917)
"The term 'combinatorial analysis' hardly admits of exact definition, and is not used in the International Schedule of pure mathematics. Broadly speaking, it has come to mean the discussion of problems which involve selections from, or arrangements of, a finite number of objects; or combinations of these two operations. For the purpose of this article it will be convenient to use Sylvester's term ‘tactic’ as a synonym for 'combinatorial analysis’." (George B Mathews, "Tactic", Science Progress in the Twentieth Century Vol. 16 No. 61, 1921)
"Perhaps the philosophically most relevant feature of modern science is the emergence of abstract symbolic structures as the hard core of objectivity behind – as Eddington puts it – the colorful tale of the subjective storyteller mind. The combinatorics of aggregates and complexes deals with some of the simplest such structures imaginable. It is gratifying that combinatorial mathematics is so closely related to the philosophically important problems of individuation and probability, and that it accounts for some of the most fundamental phenomena in inorganic and organic nature. This structural viewpoint occurs in the foundations of quantum mechanics. In a widely different field John von Neumann’s and Oskar Morgenstern’s attempt to found economics on a theory of games is characteristic of the same trend. The network of nerves joining the brain with the sense organs is a subject that by its very nature invites combinatorial investigation. Modern computing machines translate our insight into the combinatorial structure of mathematics into practice by mechanical and electronic devices." (Hermann Weyl, 1947)
"The emphasis on mathematical methods seems to be shifted more towards combinatorics and set theory - and away from the algorithm of differential equations which dominates mathematical physics." (John von Neumann & Oskar Morgenstern, "Theory of Games and Economic Behavior", 1947)