God's Pen
- 12
- 0
for me,there is no "best mathematicians" or "best physicians" i think they all make the best.
Last edited:
The forum discussion centers around identifying the greatest mathematicians and physicists of all time, with participants listing figures such as Albert Einstein, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Isaac Newton, Leonhard Euler, and Archimedes. Notably, Riemann is highlighted for his contributions to algebraic geometry and complex analysis, while Paul Erdős is debated regarding his significance in mathematics. The conversation also touches on the historical context of these figures, emphasizing the foundational work of Archimedes and the influence of other mathematicians like Galois and Grothendieck.
PREREQUISITESMathematicians, physicists, educators, and students interested in the historical development of mathematics and the contributions of key figures in the field.
robert Ihnot said:Gib Z I don't even know the persons name who first isolated Oxygen!
Priestly in 1774 extracted oxygen from mercuric oxide. He discovered that it caused a flame to burned very brightly, and a mouse could be kept alive 4 times as long in "dephlogisticated air" as in regular air.
Priestly traveled to France and met Lavaisier, who named the gas, "oxygen."
fourier jr said:in no particular order, here are some that come to mind off the top of my head:
- Hilbert
- Euler
- Erdos
- Gauss
- Archimedes
- Galois
i don't think i know enough physics to have an opinion about physicists. i guess you could go through the list of nobel prize winners to find a bunch of the best ever.
mathwonk said:We live and learn. Earlier in this thread I dissed Euclid but praised Newton for his limit definition of a derivative. Then in Fall 2009 I actually read Euclid and discovered that his description of a tangent line uses the limit definition (if you think about it, that is precisely what Proposition 16, Book III, Elements, says, in the epsilon delta version) and thus anticipates Newton by over thousand years. I then learned that Newton read Euclid shortly before coming up with his own definition. Newton has not gone down, but Euclid has gone up in my estimation. I now consider his geometry book the best available even today.
camilus said:Newton
Archimedes
Riemann
Gauss
Euler
Ramanujan
Grothendieck
What do you guys think of Grisha Perelman? I think he's absolutely brilliant.