18 October 2019

Discovery in Mathematics (unsourced)

"The chief aim of all investigations of the external world should be to discover the rational order and harmony which has been imposed on it by God and which He revealed to us in the language of mathematics." (Johannes Kepler)

"Indeed, when in the course of a mathematical investigation we encounter a problem or conjecture a theorem, our minds will not rest until the problem is exhaustively solved and the theorem rigorously proved; or else, until we have found the reasons which made success impossible and, hence, failure unavoidable. Thus, the proofs of the impossibility of certain solutions plays a predominant role in modern mathematics; the search for an answer to such questions has often led to the discovery of newer and more fruitful fields of endeavour." (David Hilbert)


"Mathematics originates in the mind of an individual, as it doubtless originated historically in the collective life of mankind, with the recognition of certain recurrent abstract features in common experience, and the development of processes of counting, measuring, and calculating, by which order can be brought into the manipulations of these features. It originated in this manner, indeed; but already at a very early stage it begins to transcend the practical sphere and its character undergoes a corresponding change. Intellectual curiosity progressively takes charge, despite the fact that practical considerations may for long continue to be the main source of interest and may indeed never cease to stimulate the creation of new concepts and new methods. As mathematics breaks from its early dependence on practical utility, its ‘immediate’ significance is at the same time lost and the goal is to discover what it is that makes 'emancipated' mathematics valid. (Geoffrey T Kneebone)

"No mathematician now-a-days sets any store on the discovery of isolated theorems, except as affording hints of an unsuspected new sphere of thought, like meteorites detached from some undiscovered planetary orb of speculation." (James J Sylvester)

"Those who have had the good fortune to be students of the great mathematician cannot forget the almost religious accent of his teaching, the shudder of beauty or mystery that he sent through his audience, at some admirable discovery or before the unknown." (Charles Hermite)

"The chief aim of all investigations of the external world should be to discover the rational order and harmony which has been imposed on it by God and which He revealed to us in the language of mathematics." (Johannes Kepler)

"Very often in mathematics the crucial problem is to recognize and discover what are the relevant concepts; once this is accomplished the job may be more than half done." (Israel N Herstein)

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