THERE is probably no other science which presents such different appearances to one who cultivates it and to one who does not, as mathematics. To this person it is ancient, venerable, and complete ; a body of dry, irrefutable, unambiguous reasoning. To... Bulletin of the New York Mathematical Society - Pagina 611892Volledige weergave - Over dit boek
| C.C. Gaither, Alma E Cavazos-Gaither - 1998 - 506 pagina’s
...different appearances to one who cultivates it and one who does not, as mathematics. To [the noncultivator] it is ancient, venerable, and complete; a body of...on the other hand, his science is yet in the purple of bloom of vigorous youth, everywhere stretching out after the "attainable but unattained," and full... | |
| Donald Saari - 2003 - 336 pagina’s
...[3] 1893 review of Sophus Lie's 1888 book with Friedrich Engel, Theorie der Transformationsgruppen. "There is probably no other science which presents...logic is beset with ambiguities, and its analytic process, like Bunyan's road, have a quagmire on one side and a deep ditch on the other and branch off... | |
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