"Briefly, Europe inherited not one but two mathematical traditions: (i) from Greece and Egypt a mathematics that was spiritual, anti-empirical, proof-oriented, and explicitly religious, and (ii) from India via Arabs a mathematics that was pro-empirical, and calculation-oriented, with practical objectives.' ... Despite the obviously different philosophical orientations of these two streams of mathematics Europe recognized only a single possible philosophy of a "universal" European mathematics, into which it forcibly sought to fit both mathematical streams."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
C. K. Raju, Cultural Foundations of Mathematics, Vol. 10, Pt. 4: The Nature of Mathematical Proof and the Transmission of the Calculus from India to Europe (India: Pearson Longman, 2007)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_mathematics
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
History of mathematics
159 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by History of mathematics →
Related Quotes
"The authors hope by publishing this work to demonstrate that the Arabs were not only transmitters of other cultures, …"
"In England, where it originated, the calculus fared less well. ...by siding completely with Newton in the priority di…"
"The evolution of number into the 'transfinite' was included only to emphasize the power of the forces acting within m…"
"The excellent work of Tropfke is an example of the tendency to break away from the mere chronological recital of facts."
"The mathematical genius can only carry on from the point which mathematical knowledge within his culture has already …"
"The Greeks studied the conic sections from a purely geometric point of view. But the invention of in the seventeenth …"
"The field of mathematics is now so extensive that no one can [any] longer pretend to cover it, least of all the speci…"
"Those people who do mathematics—the 'mathematicians'—are not only the possessors of the cultural element known as mat…"
"The fact that arithmetic and geometry took such a notable step forward... was due in no small measure to the introduc…"
"If the Greeks had had a mind to reduce mathematics to one field... their only choice would have been to reduce arithm…"