Mathematicians Of The Day
22nd June
On this day in 1633, under the threat of torture, Galileo was forced by the Inquisition to recant Copernicanism and was sentenced to life imprisonment, though the sentence was carried out somewhat sympathetically and it amounted to house arrest rather than a prison sentence.
See THIS LINK.
On this day in 2010 Google released a Zuse doodle
See THIS LINK.
On this day in 2010 Google released a Zuse doodle
Click on Ⓟ for a poster.
Born:
- 1837: Paul Bachmann Ⓟ
- 1852: Eduard Weyr Ⓟ
- 1857: Adolf Kiefer
- 1860: Mario Pieri Ⓟ
- 1864: Hermann Minkowski Ⓟ
- 1866: Kazimierz Żorawski Ⓟ
- 1906: Ott-Heinrich Keller Ⓟ
- 1910: Konrad Zuse Ⓟ
- 1913: Levan Magnaradze Ⓟ
- 1921: Ronald Mitchell Ⓟ
- 1932: Mary Warner Ⓟ
Died:
- 1450: al-Kashi Ⓟ
- 1825: Johann Karl Burckhardt Ⓟ
- 1892: Pierre Bonnet Ⓟ
- 1925: Felix Klein Ⓟ
- 1977: Marston Morse Ⓟ
Quotation of the day
From Felix Klein
If the activity of a science can be supplied by a machine, that science cannot amount to much, so it is said; and hence it deserves a subordinate place. The answer to such arguments, however, is that the mathematician, even when he is himself operating with numbers and formulas, is by no means an inferior counterpart of the errorless machine, "thoughtless thinker" of Thomas; but rather, he sets for himself his problems with definite, interesting, and valuable ends in view, and he carries them to solution in appropriate and original manner. He turns over to the machine only certain operations which occur frequently in the same way, and it is precisely the mathematician -- one must not forget this -- who invented the machine for his own relief, and who, for his own intelligent ends, designates the tasks which it shall perform.