All Questions
Tagged with big-list ho.history-overview
97 questions
424
votes
93
answers
149k
views
Video lectures of mathematics courses available online for free
It can be difficult to learn mathematics on your own from textbooks, and I often wish universities videotaped their mathematics courses and distributed them for free online. Fortunately, some ...
401
votes
53
answers
151k
views
Widely accepted mathematical results that were later shown to be wrong?
Are there any examples in the history of mathematics of a mathematical proof that was initially reviewed and widely accepted as valid, only to be disproved a significant amount of time later, possibly ...
399
votes
23
answers
69k
views
Thinking and Explaining
How big a gap is there between how you think about mathematics and what you say to others? Do you say what you're thinking? Please give either personal examples of how your thoughts and words differ, ...
220
votes
140
answers
49k
views
Fundamental Examples
It is not unusual that a single example or a very few shape an entire mathematical discipline. Can you give examples for such examples? (One example, or few, per post, please)
I'd love to learn about ...
218
votes
67
answers
47k
views
Proofs that require fundamentally new ways of thinking
I do not know exactly how to characterize the class of proofs that interests me, so let me give some examples and say why I would be interested in more. Perhaps what the examples have in common is ...
217
votes
28
answers
53k
views
The most outrageous (or ridiculous) conjectures in mathematics
The purpose of this question is to collect the most outrageous (or ridiculous) conjectures in mathematics.
An outrageous conjecture is qualified ONLY if:
1) It is most likely false
(Being hopeless is ...
197
votes
94
answers
107k
views
Famous mathematical quotes [closed]
Some famous quotes often give interesting insights into the vision of mathematics that certain mathematicians have. Which ones are you particularly fond of?
Standard community wiki rules apply: one ...
185
votes
127
answers
65k
views
Most memorable titles
Given the vast number of new papers / preprints that hit the internet everyday, one factor that may help papers stand out for a broader, though possibly more casual, audience is their title. This view ...
170
votes
47
answers
34k
views
Every mathematician has only a few tricks
In Gian-Carlo Rota's "Ten lessons I wish I had been taught" he has a section, "Every mathematician has only a few tricks", where he asserts that even mathematicians like Hilbert ...
165
votes
23
answers
30k
views
Do you read the masters?
I often hear the advice, "Read the masters" (i.e., read old, classic texts by great mathematicians). But frankly, I have hardly ever followed it. What I am wondering is, is this a ...
152
votes
26
answers
39k
views
Has philosophy ever clarified mathematics?
I've recently been reading some standard textbooks on the philosophy of mathematics, and I've become quite frustrated that (surely due to my own limitations) I don't seem to be gleaning any ...
152
votes
31
answers
27k
views
Extremely messy proofs
Currently in my undergraduate courses I am being taught how to set up various machinery using slick, short proofs and then how to apply that machinery. What I am not being taught, largely, is what ...
137
votes
26
answers
29k
views
What are some famous rejections of correct mathematics?
Dick Lipton has a blog post that motivated this question. He recalled the Stark-Heegner
Theorem: There are only a finite
number of imaginary quadratic fields
that have unique factorization. They
are $...
125
votes
31
answers
16k
views
Papers that debunk common myths in the history of mathematics
What are some good papers that debunk common myths in the history of mathematics?
To give you an idea of what I'm looking for, here are some examples.
Tony Rothman, "Genius and biographers: The ...
123
votes
35
answers
18k
views
Rediscovery of lost mathematics
Archimedes (ca. 287-212BC) described what are now known as the 13
Archimedean solids
in a lost work, later mentioned by Pappus.
But it awaited Kepler (1619) for the 13 semiregular polyhedra to be
...
122
votes
41
answers
29k
views
What are some very important papers published in non-top journals?
There has already been a question about important papers that were initially rejected. Many of the answers were very interesting. The question is here.
My concern in this question is slightly ...
120
votes
33
answers
15k
views
Examples of theorems misapplied to non-mathematical contexts
For something I'm writing -- I'm interested in examples of bad arguments which involve the application of mathematical theorems in non-mathematical contexts. E.G. folks who make theological arguments ...
114
votes
96
answers
16k
views
What would you want to see at the Museum of Mathematics? [closed]
EDIT (30 Nov 2012): MoMath is opening in a couple of weeks, so this seems like it might be a good time for any last-minute additions to this question before I vote to close my own question as "no ...
110
votes
89
answers
29k
views
Tweetable Mathematics
Update: Please restrict your answers to "tweets" that give more than just the statement of the result, and give also the essence (or a useful hint) of the argument/novelty.
I am looking for ...
110
votes
10
answers
15k
views
Analogues of P vs. NP in the history of mathematics
Recently I wrote a blog post entitled "The Scientific Case for P≠NP". The argument I tried to articulate there is that there seems to be an "invisible electric fence" separating the problems in P ...
109
votes
19
answers
38k
views
Why were matrix determinants once such a big deal?
I have been told that the study of matrix determinants once comprised the bulk of linear algebra. Today, few textbooks spend more than a few pages to define it and use it to compute a matrix inverse. ...
107
votes
32
answers
15k
views
The half-life of a theorem, or Arnold's principle at work
Suppose you prove a theorem, and then sleep well at night knowing that future generations will remember your name in conjunction with the great advance in human wisdom. In fact, sadly, it seems that ...
107
votes
26
answers
15k
views
Fields of mathematics that were dormant for a long time until someone revitalized them
I thought that the closed question here could be modified to a very interesting question (at least as far as big-list type questions go).
Can people name examples of fields of mathematics that were ...
104
votes
19
answers
14k
views
Can a mathematical definition be wrong?
This question originates from a bit of history. In the first paper on quantum Turing machines, the authors left a key uniformity condition out of their definition. Three mathematicians subsequently ...
103
votes
15
answers
17k
views
Have you solved problems in your sleep?
I have hit upon major (for me—relative to my trivial accomplishments)
insights in my research
in various sleep-deprived altered states of consciousness,
e.g., long solo car-drives extending through ...
92
votes
74
answers
27k
views
Pseudonyms of famous mathematicians
Many mathematicians know that Lewis Carroll was quite a good mathematician, who wrote about logic (paradoxes) and determinants. He found an expansion formula, which bears his real name (Charles ...
91
votes
70
answers
18k
views
Old books still used
It's a commonplace to state that while other sciences (like biology) may always need the newest books, we mathematicians also use to use older books. While this is a qualitative remark, I would like ...
91
votes
24
answers
22k
views
Examples of major theorems with very hard proofs that have not dramatically improved over time
This question complement a previous MO question: Examples of theorems with proofs that have dramatically improved over time.
I am looking for a list of
Major theorems in mathematics whose proofs are ...
89
votes
27
answers
12k
views
Modern Mathematical Achievements Accessible to Undergraduates
While there is tremendous progress happening in mathematics, most of it is just accessible to specialists. In many cases, the proofs of great results are both long and use difficult techniques. Even ...
86
votes
38
answers
11k
views
Books about history of recent mathematics
I draw on this question to ask something that has always been a pet peeve of mine. It is very easy to find books about the history of mathematics, much less so if one wants books about the recent (say ...
85
votes
19
answers
15k
views
Each mathematician has only a few tricks
The question "Every mathematician has only a few tricks" originally had approximately the title of my question here, but originally admitted an interpretation asking for a small collection ...
84
votes
37
answers
22k
views
What are some correct results discovered with incorrect (or no) proofs?
Many famous results were discovered through non-rigorous proofs, with
correct proofs being found only later and with greater difficulty. One that is well
known is Euler's 1737 proof that
$1+\frac{1}{...
84
votes
11
answers
12k
views
What are examples of (collections of) papers which "close" a field?
There is sometimes talk of fields of mathematics being "closed", "ended", or "completed" by a paper or collection of papers. It seems as though this could happen in two ways:
A total characterisation,...
79
votes
13
answers
21k
views
Nontrivially fillable gaps in published proofs of major theorems
Prelude: In 1998, Robert Solovay wrote an email to John Nash to communicate an error that he detected in the proof of the Nash embedding theorem, as presented in Nash's well-known paper "The Imbedding ...
76
votes
19
answers
18k
views
What are some deep theorems, and why are they considered deep?
All mathematicians are used to thinking that certain theorems are deep, and we would probably all point to examples such as Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions, the prime number ...
75
votes
29
answers
13k
views
(Preferably rare) Audio/Video recordings of famous mathematicians?
Terence Tao's homepage has a link to a collection of quotes, and one among them was Hilbert's famous "We must know, we will know" quote. This quote also had an audio link to it. Now although I'm not ...
73
votes
17
answers
9k
views
Mathematical research published in the form of poems
The article
Friedrich Wille: Galerkins Lösungsnäherungen bei monotonen Abbildungen,
Math. Z. 127 (1972), no. 1, 10-16
is written in the form of a lengthy poem, in a style similar to that
of the ...
71
votes
34
answers
12k
views
Trichotomies in mathematics
Added. Thanks to all who participated! Let me humbly apologize to those who were annoyed (quite understandably) by this thread, deeming it nothing more than an exercise in futility. If you thought the ...
68
votes
9
answers
12k
views
When have we lost a body of mathematics because errors were found?
The history of mathematics over the last 200 years has many occasions when the fundamental assumptions of an area have been shown to be flawed, or even wrong. Yet I cannot think of any examples where, ...
67
votes
22
answers
10k
views
When has discrete understanding preceded continuous?
From my limited perspective, it appears that the understanding
of a mathematical phenomenon has usually been achieved,
historically, in a continuous setting
before it was fully explored in a discrete ...
67
votes
19
answers
14k
views
Mathematicians whose works were criticized by contemporaries but became widely accepted later
Gauss famously discarded Abel's proof that an algebraic equation of degree five or more cannot have a general solution (Abel himself had rejected divergent series as the work of the devil). Cantor's ...
67
votes
16
answers
9k
views
What do named "tricks" share?
There are a number of theorems or lemmas or mathematical ideas that come to be known as eponymous
tricks, a term which in this context is in no sense derogatory.
Here is a list of 11 such tricks (the ...
64
votes
68
answers
16k
views
Mathematicians with both “very abstract” and “very applied” achievements
Gödel had a cosmological model. Hamel, primarily a mechanician, gave any vector space a basis. Plücker, best known for line geometry, spent years on magnetism. What other mathematicians had so distant ...
63
votes
7
answers
8k
views
Theorems demoted back to conjectures
Many mathematicians know the Four Color Theorem and its history: there were two alleged proofs in 1879 and 1880 both of which stood unchallenged for 11 years before flaws were discovered.
I am ...
60
votes
35
answers
15k
views
Notable mathematics during World War II
It seems fairly well known that Leray originated the ideas of spectral sequences and sheaves while being held in a prisoner of war camp in Austria from 1940 to 1945. Weil famously proved the Riemann ...
60
votes
15
answers
11k
views
Abstract thought vs calculation
Jeremy Avigad and Erich Reck claim that one factor leading to abstract mathematics in the late 19th century (as opposed to concrete mathematics or hard analysis) was the use of more abstract notions ...
56
votes
3
answers
11k
views
Work of plenary speakers at ICM 2018
The next International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) will be next year in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The present question is the 2018 version of similar questions from 2014 and 2010. Can you, please, ...
53
votes
11
answers
6k
views
What definitions were crucial to further understanding?
Often the most difficult part of venturing into a field as a researcher is to come up with an appropriate definition. Sometimes definitions suggest themselves very naturally, as when you solve a ...
52
votes
14
answers
9k
views
Modern results that are widely known, yet which at the time were ignored, not accepted or criticized
What is your favorite example of a celebrated mathematical fact that had a hard time to become accepted by the community, but after overcoming some initial "resistance" quickly took on?
It ...
51
votes
30
answers
8k
views
Taking a theorem as a definition and proving the original definition as a theorem
Gian-Carlo Rota's famous 1991 essay, "The pernicious influence of mathematics upon philosophy" contains the following passage:
Perform the following thought experiment. Suppose that you are ...