"With the help of books only he Wilhelm Xylander] studied the subject of Algebra, as far as was possible from what men like Cardan had written and by his own reflection, with such success that not only did he fall into what Herakleitos called... the conceit of "being somebody" in the field of Arithmetic and "Logistic," but others too who were themselves learned men thought him an arithmetician of exceptional merit. But when he first became acquainted with the problems of Diophantos his pride had a fall so sudden and so humiliating that he might reasonably doubt whether he ought previously to have bewailed, or laughed at himself. He considers it therefore worth while to confess publicly in how disgraceful a condition of ignorance he had previously been content to live, and to do something to make known the work of Diophantos, which had so opened his eyes."
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Sir Thomas Little Heath, Diophantos of Alexandria: A Study in the History of Greek Algebra (1885) Ch.3, The Writers Upon Diophantos, pp. 46-47
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_algebra
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History of algebra
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