30 November 2025

On Numbers (1850-1874)

"[…] chance, that is, an infinite number of events, with respect to which our ignorance will not permit us to perceive their causes, and the chain that connects them together. Now, this chance has a greater share in our education than is imagined. It is this that places certain objects before us and, in consequence of this, occasions more happy ideas, and sometimes leads us to the greatest discoveries […]" (Claude A Helvetius, "On Mind", 1751)

"One must admit that it is not a simple matter to accurately outline the idea of negative numbers, and that some capable people have added to the confusion by their inexact pronouncements. To say that the negative numbers are below nothing is to assert an unimaginable thing." (Jean le Rond d'Alembert, "Negatif", Encyclopédie [1751 – 1772])

"[…] the algebraic rules of operation with negative numbers are generally admitted by everyone and acknowledged as exact, whatever idea we may have about this quantities. " (Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Encyclopédie, [1751 – 1772])

"The properties of the numbers known today have been mostly discovered by observation, and discovered long before their truth has been confirmed by rigid demonstrations. There are even many properties of the numbers with which we are well acquainted, but which we are not yet able to prove; only observations have led us to their knowledge. Hence we see that in the theory of numbers, which is still very imperfect, we can place our highest hopes in observations." (Leonhard Euler, "Specimen de usu observationum in mathesi pura, ["Example of the use of observation in pure mathematics"], cca. 1753)

"[negative numbers] darken the very whole doctrines of the equations and to make dark of the things which are in their nature excessively obvious and simple. It would have been desirable in consequence that the negative roots were never allowed in algebra or that they were discarded." (Francis Meseres, 1759)



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