24 January 2020

On Abstraction (1900-1910)

"Our science, in contrast with others, is not founded on a single period of human history, but has accompanied the development of culture through all its stages. Mathematics is as much interwoven with Greek culture as with the most modern problems in Engineering. She not only lends a hand to the progressive natural sciences but participates at the same time in the abstract investigations of logicians and philosophers." (Felix Klein, "Klein und Riecke: Ueber angewandte Mathematik und Physik" 1900)

"The man of science deals with questions which commonly lie outside of the range of ordinary experience, which often have no immediately discernible relation to the affairs of everyday life, and which concentrate the mind upon apparent abstractions to an extraordinary degree." (Frank W Clarke, "The Man of Science in Practical Affairs", Appletons' Popular Science Monthly Vol. XLV, 1900)

"A mathematical theorem and its demonstration are prose. But if the mathematician is overwhelmed with the grandeur and wondrous harmony of geometrical forms, of the importance and universal application of mathematical maxims, or, of the mysterious simplicity of its manifold laws which are so self-evident and plain and at the same time so complicated and profound, he is touched by the poetry of his science; and if he but understands how to give expression to his feelings, the mathematician turns poet, drawing inspiration from the most abstract domain of scientific thought." (Paul Carus, „Friedrich Schiller: A Sketch of His Life and an Appreciation of His Poetry", 1905)

"But, once again, what the physical states as the result of an experiment is not the recital of observed facts, but the interpretation and the transposing of these facts into the ideal, abstract, symbolic world created by the theories he regards as established." (Pierre-Maurice-Marie Duhem, "The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory", 1908)

[…] theory of numbers lies remote from those who are indifferent; they show little interest in its development, indeed they positively avoid it. [..] the pure theory of numbers is an extremely abstract thing, and one does not often find the gift of ability to understand with pleasure anything so abstract."  (Felix Klein, "Elementary Mathematics from an Advanced Standpoint", 1908)

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