"Number theory is useful, since one can graduate with it." (Edmund Landau, "Vorlesungen über Zahlentheorie", ["Lectures on Number Theory"], 1927)
"Roughly it amounts to this: mathematical analysis as it works today must make use of irrational numbers (such as the square root of two); the sense if any in which such numbers exist is hazy. Their reputed mathematical existence implies the disputed theories of the infi nite. The paradoxes remain. Without a satisfactory theory of irrational numbers, among other things, Achilles does not catch up with the tortoise, and the earth cannot turn on its axis. But as Galileo remarked, it does. It would seem to follow that something is wrong with our attempts to compass the infinite." (Eric T Bell, "Debunking Science", 1930)
"The theory of numbers is the last great uncivilized continent of mathematics. It is split up into innumerable countries, fertile enough in themselves, but all the more or less indifferent to one another’s welfare and without a vestige of a central, intelligent government. If any young Alexander is weeping for a new world to conquer, it lies before him." (Eric T Bell, "The Queen of the Sciences", 1931)
"No one has yet discovered any warlike purpose to be served by the theory of numbers or relativity, and it seems unlikely that anyone will do so for many years." (Godfrey H Hardy, "A Mathematician's Apology", 1941)
"The theory of numbers, more than any other branch of mathematics, began by being an experimental science. Its most famous theorems have all been conjectured, sometimes a hundred years or more before they were proved; and they have been suggested by the evidence of a mass of computations." (Godfrey H Hardy, "A Mathematician's Apology", 1941)
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