1. Useful Web Links on History of
Mathematical Sciences†
by
MAN MOHAN
Dept. of Mathematics & Statistics, Ramjas College,
University of Delhi, Delhi 110007, India
E-mail: manmohan@indianshm.com
The Internet is a wonderful place to explore the vast amount of information that it makes
available around the world, but without borders and often confusing the explorer. Even well
prepared surfers stumble aimlessly through cyberspace using hit-or-miss methods in search of
useful information with few results, little substance and lots of frustration. The purpose of this
article is to encourage and facilitate the teaching and learning of history of mathematics at all
levels, using the Web. Some of the most useful resources on the history of mathematics are
identified, described, and hyperlinked. The resources are divided into eleven sections. While
some websites may fall in more than one section, each website appears in what seemed to be
the most relevant section.
INTRODUCTION
The Internet is a wonderful place to explore the vast amount of information that it makes
available around the world, but without borders and often confusing the explorer. Even
well prepared surfers stumble aimlessly through cyberspace using hit-or-miss methods in
search of useful information with few results, little substance and lots of frustration. The
purpose of this article is to encourage and facilitate the teaching and learning of history of
mathematics at all levels, using the Web. Some of the most useful resources on the
history of mathematics are identified, described, and hyperlinked. The resources are
divided into twelve sections. While some websites may fall in more than one section, each
website appears in what seemed to be the most relevant section.
The section ‘Gateway Pages’ includes some of the best known general websites on history
of mathematical sciences providing historical accounts by regions of the world, timelines,
a chronology, an index of files, etc. An extensive list of resources including links to stand-
alone sites containing material on a single topic is provided in the section ‘Useful Web
Resources’. A few of the many wonderful websites that provide biographies of
mathematicians are identified and describes in the section ‘General and Individual
Biographies’. Some websites devoted to individuals like Sir Isaac Newton, Archimedes,
and Paul Erdös etc. are also listed. The section ‘Regional Mathematics’ provides a short list
of websites that give a variety of material on the development of mathematical sciences in
specific regions of the globe. The section ‘History of Vedic Mathematics’ describes some
websites that offer interesting literature on the development of Vedic Mathematics, the
ancient system of mathematics of the Vedas.
Some other sections are: ‘On-line Books and Journals’ that lists sites providing on-line
availability of the contents of some books and journals, ‘Bibliographic Resources’ which
contains sites giving lists of published books and/or articles relevant to history of
mathematics in an educational context, ‘Societies for Mathematics History’ which includes
†
Talk given at the National Seminar on History of Mathematical Sciences & Applicable Mathematics held
at Gurugula Kangri Vishwavidyalaya, Hardwar on March 7-9, 2003 and at the E.M.C. Mathematics
Academic Camp for Teachers held at Delhi Public School, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi on May 30, 2003.
1
2. home pages of three well known societies that promote history of mathematical sciences,
‘Links on History of Computing’ which lists sites related to the development of computers
and computing. Using history in mathematics classes helps to increase motivation for
learning. The section ‘History in Education’ includes websites that promote the use of
history in mathematics classes, websites that provide examples where this concept has
been applied, and websites that post bibliographies and additional links that allow for
extended research. Finally, the section ‘Miscellaneous Resources’ contains a few websites
that may be helpful or interesting to visit but which do not fall naturally into any of the
above sections.
GATEWAY PAGES
All general sites have a gateway page that indicates the type of resources that are
available on other pages of the site. The gateways to some of the best-known general
sites on history of mathematical sciences are given below:
David Joyce’s History of Mathematics Archive
aleph0.clarku .edu/~djoyce/mathhist/mathhist.html
Maintained at the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science of Clark University,
this site features a look at the history of mathematics. Find historical accounts by regions
of the world, timelines, a chronology, an index of files, and a list of books, journals,
bibliography and other resources. This is the starting point to a wealth of resources
provided by David Joyce of Clark University, USA. There are pages on subjects, history of
mathematics texts etc, as well as an excellent list of clearly categorized Web Resources.
The Math Forum Resource Collection
http://mathforum.org/library/topics/history/
Part of the The Math Forum, an on-line mathematics education community centre, this site
provides an extensive list of annotated links to other sites. These sites are arranged
alphabetically and the collection can be viewed in outline or annotated form. There is a
well-designed search engine that allows for a variety of searches, like keywords,
categories and dates.
MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive
www-groups.dcs.st-and rews.ac.uk/~history
The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive is the prominent site on the WWW for
information on the history of mathematics. It probably contains as much information as all
the rest combined. It has 1300 biographies, 60 famous curves, 30 history topics,
chronologies, birthplace maps, and posters. Maintained by John O Conner at the University
of St. Andrews in Scotland the offers search forms, suggestions, and historical and
biographical information. It provides a variety of resources on the developments of various
branches of mathematics and includes an interactive famous curves index, pages on
mathematical societies etc.
Trinity College Mathematics History Archive
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/HistMath/HistMath.html
Created and maintained by David Wilkins of Trinity College, Dublin, this site includes
biographies of some seventeenth and eighteenth century mathematicians, sufficient
material on Berkeley, Newton, Hamilton, Boole, Riemann and Cantor, and an extensive
directory of history of mathematics websites.
USEFUL WEB RESOURCES
BSHM Resources
2
3. www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/resources.html
Here is a well-organized collection of links to Web Sites on the History of Mathematics.
The resources include David Calvis's History of Mathematics Web Sites.
Joyce's History of Mathematics Web Resources
http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/webresources.html
This is a well categorized and annotated list of resources. Hypermedia exhibits are listed
separately and there are also links to history of science pages. The emphasis is more
towards larger sites containing sequences of internal links rather than stand-alone sites
containing material on a single topic or person.
Mathematical Quotations Server
math.furman.edu/~mwoodard /mquot.html
From South Carolina's Furman University, this site offers visitors quotations about math.
Features include a keyword search engine and links to the sponsoring university.
Calvis's History of Mathematics Web Sites
http://www2.bw.edu/~dcalvis/history.html
A well-annotated list of about twenty-five sites put together by David Calvis of Baldwin-
Wallace College, Ohio. Specialised sites are listed in order of earliest date covered.
MacTutor History of Mathematics: Links to external pages
http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/External/external_links.html
The site contains an annotated but unordered list of twenty-six sites related to history of
mathematical sciences, including most of the major ones.
The Mathematical Museum - History Wing
http://elib.zib-berlin.de:88/Math-Net/Links/mathe-museum.hist.html
The 'History' wing of The Mathematical Museum is part of the Math-Net Links to the
Mathematical World. It contains links to exhibitions, on-line books, information systems,
museums and pages of interest for the history of mathematics, history of computing and
communication and associated fields along with related history. It also includes some
sample illustrations.
Trinity College Mathematics History archive
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/HistMath/Links.html
The site contains an extremely well organized and extensive list of Web resources. The
sites are categorized and include many of the best sites currently accessible. If you know
of a good site but do not have the address there is a reasonable chance that you will find
it here.
MathWeb History
www.ams.org/mathweb/mi-mathhist.html
The site provides Links to CSHPM Services; Links to Sites Related to the History and
Philosophy of Mathematics and a page of links to other related sites.
History of Mathematics Resources
math.haifa.ac.il/math-history.html
Maintained by the Dept. of mathematics at University of Haifa, Israel, the site provides
links to 39 resources. The list includes AMS history of mathematics sites, Arabic
mathematics, Biographies of women mathematicians, A brief history of algebra and
computing, BSHM list of web sites on the history of mathematics, Calculating machines,
Egyptian mathematics, Greek mathematics and its heirs, History and pedagogy of
mathematics, etc.
History of Mathematics Sites: Math I
3
4. http://home.europa.com/~paulg/mathI_mathist.shtml
Many sites have math history links, but this seems to be the grand daddy of them all. Any
topic or person of any time or region can be searched here. It contains a section on
women mathematicians also, as well as links to other math history sites. It is worthwhile
to visit for anything concerning history of mathematical sciences.
Encyclopædia Britannica
www.britannica.com/eb/article
Encyclopædia Britannica is the Net's finest encyclopedia. Britannica's editors have
developed a user-friendly citation style for citing electronic publications, e.g.
“mathematics, history of". For each topic it has an exhaustive table of contents, complete
index entries, and citation information to simplify your research. Britannica can't be beat
for researching famous (and not-so-famous) people, places, and things, although
complete articles are not available for free.
GENERAL AND INDIVIDUAL BIOGRAPHIES
A wide variety of material is available on the Web concerned with lives of mathematicians.
There are sites devoted to certain groups, e.g. mathematicians of a particular period
and/or place, and sites that are extensive compendiums of biography. There are also sites
devoted to ‘individuals’, like The Sir Isaac Newton Home Page and The Alan Turing Home
Page, which generally contain material about the individual and have good links to other
relevant sites
St Andrews Archive
http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/BiogIndex.html
Here is a collection of more than 1,000 biographies, of mathematicians illustrated,
referenced, and indexed both alphabetically and chronologically. There are also birthplace
maps, as well as a separate index of female mathematicians. It is the best place to start
for basic biographical information.
Alphabetical Index of Mathematicians
www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Alphabetical.html
This site provides an alphabetical index of mathematicians with links to their detailed
biographies. A chronological index, a short biographies index and a history topics index
are also available.
Hall of Great Mathematicians
http://www.siue.edu/~dcollin/mathfame.html
The page is maintained by David Collins, Jr. at Southern Illinois University. Here one finds
an alphabetical list of mathematicians with short biographies.
Women Mathematicians
www.scottlan.edu/lrid dle/women/women.htm
The Agnes Scott College Mathematics Department hosts this collection of biographies of
women mathematicians. Browse the biographies by alphabetical or chronological order,
read the photo credits or link to related resources on the Web.
Mathematicians of the 17th and 18th Centuries
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/HistMath/People/RBallHist.html
Here is a collection of biographies of the 17th and 18th century mathematicians adapted
from W.W. Rouse Ball’s A Short Account of the History of Mathematics
Some Famous Mathematicians
4
5. http://euler.ciens.ucv.ve/English/mathematics/
Hosted by Alexander Velasquez at the Central University of Venezuela, the page provides
information on about 20 famous mathematicians.
Portraits of Statisticians
http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/maths/histstat/people/
This site gives a nice collection of portraits of approximately two hundred statisticians,
including several mathematicians who dabbled in statistical work, ranging from the 15th
century to the present day, compiled by Peter Lee of York University. However the site
does not include any text but the sources, together with some biographical references, are
included.
Archimedes
http://www.mcs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/contents.html
This site has a rich collection of Archimedean miscellanea produced by Chris Rorres of
Drexel University, Philadelphia, including a pages on different aspects of Archimedes'
mathematics, books on Archimedes, information on Syracuse, and links to other related
sites, e.g. a bibliography of Archimedean literature.
History of Mathematics: Mathematicians
http://www.math.sfu.ca/histmath/
It has a limited number of pages on mathematicians from Europe, China, India, and
Egypt. It also includes a section on special topics. Len Berggren at Simon Fraser University
in Burnaby, Canada hosts it.
Paul Erdös
http://www.paulerdos.com/
This site is created and maintained by Paul Hoffman, the author of the book The Man Who
Loved Only Numbers: The Story of Paul Erdös and the Search for Mathematical Truth. The
book is a work of oral history based on the recollections of Erdös, his numerous
collaborators, and their spouses.
Fibonacci (Leonardo of Pisa)
http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibBio.html
The work of Ron Knott of the University of Surrey, this site contains a biographical sketch
of Fibonacci, his life, times and mathematical achievements. There are also pages on the
golden ratio and methods for computing pi using the Fibonacci numbers.
Newton.org.uk
http://www.newton.org.uk
Created by Andrew McNab of Manchester University this site provides a wide-ranging
collection of material about Newton, as well as information about places and people
significant to him. It includes a nice detailed explanation, About Newtonia, of the genesis
of the site. There are good links to other Newton resources.
Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
www.newton.cam.ac.uk/
A national institute located at Great Britain's Cambridge University, the Isaac Newton
Institute for Mathematical Sciences offers this overview of its history, ongoing scientific
work and services.
REGIONAL MATHEMATICS
5
6. Many of the gateway pages, notably David Joyce's site and the Mac Tutor site listed in
Section 1, include good regional pages. The following is a short list of some smaller sites
that give a variety of material on specific regions.
Mathematicians of the African Diaspora
http://www.math.buffalo.edu/mad/mad0.html
Created and maintained by Scott Williams of the State University of New York at Buffalo,
this site exhibits the accomplishments of the people of Africa and Africa Diaspora within
the mathematical sciences. The history pages include the mathematics of Ancient Egypt,
Pre-Colonial Nigeria, and Swaziland (the Lemombo Bone). There are good links to other
related sites.
Egyptian Mathematics Problems
http://eyelid.ukonline.co.uk/ancient/maths1.htm and /maths2.htm and /maths3.htm
Here one finds some basic mathematical problems for high school pupils, produced by
artist Mark Millimore as part of his extensively illustrated Ancient Egypt site.
Egyptian Fractions
http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/numth/egypt/
Here is an investigation into Egyptian fractions using Mathematica. Several annotated links
to other sites of interest on Egyptian mathematics.
Ancient India's Contribution to Mathematics
http://india.coolatlanta.com/GreatPages/sudheer/maths.html
The site provides a broad outline of the achievements of Indian mathematicians between
1000BC and 1000AD, extracted from Birodkar Sudheer's book India's Contribution to
World Culture.
Japanese Mathematics
http://www.tcp-ip.or.jp/~hom/historyofmath/review/hmreview.html
The site contains a list of articles on the history of Japanese mathematics written in a
European language. It is the work of Ogawa Tsukane.
History of Mathematics: China
aleph0.clarku.ed u/~djoyce/mathhist/china.html
The Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Clark University in Worcester,
Mass., maintains this site to outline the history of mathematics in China. Visit here to view
a chronology of Chinese math studies, read profiles of noted mathematicians, and link to
other Chinese historic and cultural resources.
History of Mathematics Home Page
http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/mathhist.html
Maintained by David Joyce at Clark University provides valuable information on
mathematicians arranged chronologically and by the following regions: Europe, Greece,
Japan, China, Arab Sphere, India, Egypt, and Babylonia. It also contains data by subjects
and timelines.
Mathematics in Latvia
http://www.math.cornell.edu/~dtaimina/mathinlv.html
This site gives a 'draft' of an informative paper by Ingrida Henina and Daina Taimina on
the history of mathematics in Latvia.
HISTORY OF VEDIC MATHEMATICS
6
7. Rediscovered between 1911 and 1918 by Sri Bharati Krsna Tirthaji, this is the ancient
system of mathematics of the Vedas. According to him all of mathematics is based on
sixteen Sutras, or word-formulae. The following sites offer interesting literature on the
subject.
What is Vedic Mathematics?
http://www.vedicmaths.org.uk/menu_files/WhatisVM.htm
Development History of Vedic Mathematics
http://www.vedicmaths.org.uk/group_files/history%20VM/history%20VM.htm
Vedic Maths Tutorials
http://www.vedicmaths.org.uk/group_files/tutorial/Tutorial%20menus.htm
The Magic of Vedic Maths - What's This?
http://hinduism.about.com/library/weekly/aa062901b.htm
This is an all-in-one site to know about Vedic Mathematics and Bharati Krishna Tirthaji,
who delved into the ancient Vedic texts and established the techniques of this system in
his pioneering work — Vedic Mathematics (1965), which is considered the starting point
for all work on Vedic math.
Math can be fun
www.blonnet.com/businessline/ew/ 2001/09/19/stories/0219b15b.htm
Visit this site to learn how to use Vedic Mathematics. The concept of Vedic mathematics is
explained more than makes up. There are separate drop-down links to what the subject is
all about, its history and tutorial…..
ON-LINE BOOKS AND JOURNALS
Cornell University Library Math Book Collection
http://moa.cit.cornell.edu/dienst-data/cdl-math-browse.html
This collection consists of 571 books that have been scanned from originals held by Cornell
University Library. It is indexed by author and by title, although without the date of the
edition. Since all books were dismounted and all pages scanned (even the blank ones!)
the reproduction quality is extremely good.
Rouse Ball's History of Mathematics
http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/HistMath/People/RBallHist.html
Excerpts from Rouse Ball's well know book A Short Account of the History of Mathematics
(4th edition, 1908).
Euclid's Elements
http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/java/elements/toc.html
The site gives an interactive version of Euclid's Elements with historical and mathematical
comments produced by David Joyce. With a Java enabled browser it is possible to
dynamically change the diagrams. The site makes the Elements accessible in a completely
new way.
Historia Mathematica Homepage
www.chass.utoronto.ca/hm/
Founded in 1974, Historia Mathematica is the official journal of the International
Commission on the History of Mathematics. It publishes research articles in all areas of
7
8. history of mathematics, book reviews, abstracts of recently published books and articles,
and miscellaneous items of interest to historians of mathematics. The site contains
information about the Journal, a table of contents of all volumes, a list of journals in
related fields, and links to other sites.
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RESOURCES
The following sites contain lists of published books and/or articles which are relevant to
using history of mathematics in an educational context.
Teaching History of Mathematics
http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/people/rickey/hm/mini/default.html
It contains a list of published papers which discuss the teaching of history of mathematics
courses.
Textbooks for a History of Mathematics Course
http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/people/rickey/hm/mini/books.html
You will here a list of possible textbooks for a history of mathematics course. These are
books mostly suitable for teaching an undergraduate course but they also provide good
background reading for anyone with a general interest in the history of mathematics.
BSHM Abstracts
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/abs.html
This site contains brief abstracts, sorted alphabetically by author, of papers published in
journals and books. A separate section covers abstracts of papers on the uses of history of
mathematics in education, history of mathematics courses, and the history of
mathematics education.
Texts on the History of Mathematics
http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/textbooks.html
Here one finds a list of texts including textbooks and similar general references. There is
no annotation, so only useful if you know the name of a source and need further details.
Non-Euclidean Geometries
www.cut-the-knot.org/triangle/pythpar/NonEuclid.html
Discovery of non-Euclidean geometries had a profound impact on the development of
mathematics in the 19th and 20th centuries. The site provides links to the references that
give a good account of development that took place before and after the discovery. It
includes links on the Fifth Postulate, Drama of the Discovery. Some of the listed resources
are T. Heath: Euclid's Elements, D. Hilbert: Foundations of Geometry, J.Fauvel and J.Gray,
ed:The History of Mathematics, M.Kac and S.Ulam: Mathematics and Logic, etc.
SOCIETIES FOR MATHEMATICS HISTORY
The Indian Society for History of Mathematics
http://www.indianshm.com
The site was launched in 2003. It includes latest news concerning history of mathematical
sciences, information on forthcoming conferences, reports of recently held ISHM
conferences, membership details, contents pages of all volumes of Ganita Bharati and
some selected articles in the field. The site provides a platform to exchange views on
anything concerning mathematics history. It also provides links to other important sites in
the area.
8
9. The British Society for the History of Mathematics
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/
The site includes membership details, BSHM abstracts, an archive containing a list of talks
given to the Society, and a page of links to other sites. The site contains some 50 pages
compiled by prominent British academics at the Open University, U.K. working in the
history of mathematics.
The Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Mathematics
http://www.cshpm.org/
This is the Home Page of The Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of
Mathematics which manages Links to CSHPM Services; Links to Sites Related to the
History and Philosophy of Mathematics. This site includes membership details, free access
to the History and Pedagogy of Mathematics Newsletter, two official journals, Historia
Mathematica and Philosophia Mathematica and a page of links to other sites.
The Kurt Gödel Society
http://www.logic.at/kgs/home.html
Founded in 1987, the Kurt Gödel Society is an international organization for the promotion
of research in the areas of Logic, Philosophy, History of Mathematics, the biography of
Kurt Gödel, and in other areas to which Gödel made contributions, especially
mathematics, physics, theology, philosophy etc. A. Setzer of Uppsala university has
provided a list of research groups for mathematical logic, philosophical logic and
theoretical computer science on the WWW, which contains links to related topics as well.
LINKS ON HISTORY OF COMPUTING
Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine
http://www.fourmilab.ch/babbage/contents.html
The site exhibits texts of historical documents, including Menebrea's description of the
Engine translated by Ada Lovelace, and a detailed description of an Analytical Engine
emulator.
History of Computing Information
http:// ftp.arl.mil/~mike/comphist/
Assembled by Mike Muuss, this site gives information about the history of computing, with
a focusing on the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC), the world's first
electronic digital computer. The purpose of this Archive is to help the public remember
that it was the U. S. Army which initiated the computer revolution by building ENIAC
during World War II, giving birth to a technology which would change the world. There are
14 links giving information, stories and photographs of the early days of the machine. The
site also provides links to 37 other web sites related to the history of computers and
computing including the origins and development of the Internet.
The Virtual Museum of computing
http://vmoc.museophile.com/
Developed and maintained by J. Bowen of South Bank University, this site is an extensive
collection of links to sites connected with the history of computing and computer-based
exhibits. It is divided into galleries covering a variety of topics.
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10. HISTORY IN EDUCATION
Using History in Math Class
http://www.math.ilstu.edu/~marshall
The purpose of this site is to encourage and facilitate the use of the history of
mathematics in the teaching and learning of mathematics at all levels. Gerald L. Marshall
created it as a Ph.D. project. Here some of the most useful resources on the history of
mathematics that provide assistance for the inclusion of history in the mathematics
classroom are identified, described, and hyperlinked. The resources are divided into five
broad categories. The category ‘Instructional’ includes sites that promote the use of
history in mathematics classes, those providing examples where the concept has been
applied, and those which post bibliographies. A teacher can find samples of classroom
proved projects here. The category ‘Topical’ includes sites that develop mathematical
subjects, historical topics, and famous curves. An instructor can provide historical
introductions to concepts that are new to their pupils. The category ‘Biographical’ identifies
and describes only a few of the many wonderful sites that provide biographies of
mathematicians. An instructor can quickly find anecdotes on notable mathematicians to
share. Likewise, the category ‘Informational’ contains locations with abstracts, informal
notes, and on-line discussions and courses. A teacher should encourage the creation of
posters and papers that have an historical theme.
Fred Rickey's Home Page
http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/people/rickey/hm/default.htm
Home Page of Fred Rickey of Bowling Green University, USA, one of the leading
proponents of using history in mathematics education. The site contains annotated links to
wide variety of resources, including a description of his history of mathematics course.
Syllabus: History of Mathematics
www.math.utah.edu/~carlson/history/2001/Syllabus.pdf
The site gives the syllabus for a history of mathematics class and its instructional plan by
Instructor Jim Carlson. The outline follows the major headings of Calinger's book Classics
of Mathematics and spans a 3500 year period, from about 1750 BC to 1750 AD. The aim
of the course is to gain an understanding of how mathematical ideas have developed over
time, how social, cultural, and historical factors influenced the development of
mathematics, and, conversely, how mathematics contributed to society and human
culture, leading eventually to a scientific view of nature.
History of Mathematics with Original Sources
http://www.ma.iup.edu/~gstoudt/history/ma350/sources_home.html
The site, which is the work of Gary Stoudt of Indiana University of Pennsylvania, contains
a reading list, and a collection of discussion questions and homework problems, together
with some images of famous works. It is good collection of materials for using original
sources in a history of mathematics class.
Teaching with Original Historical Sources in Mathematics
http://math.nmsu.edu/~history/
Managed by David Pengelley at New Mexico State University, this page offers experiences
and materials from using original historical sources in teaching mathematics. It contains
articles on and about history of mathematics and its role in teaching.
Mathematical Connections
http://www.aug.edu/dvskel/welcome.html
An on-line publication on the history and philosophy of mathematics, it presents
applications of history of mathematics in the classroom. Keith Luoma at Augusta State
University manages it.
10
11. MISCELLANEOUS RESOURCES
We list below a few sites that may be helpful or interesting to visit but which do not fall
naturally into any of the above categories:
Welcome to a Mathematical Journey through Time
http://nunic.nu.edu/~frosamon/history/math.html
Maintained by Frances Rosamond at the National University, this site provides an
interactive timeline from 3000 BC to the present and beyond.
Earliest Uses of Various Mathematical Symbols
http://members.aol.com/jeff570/mathsym.html
Some Earliest Known Uses of Mathematics Words
http://members.aol.com/jeff570/mathword.html
Product of multiple contributors, the above two identify the names of individuals who first
used various common mathematical symbols or words and the dates the symbols/words
were first used. The site is maintained by Jeff Miller of Gulf High School, Florida and
welcomes any further contributions.
Images of Mathematicians on Postage Stamps
http://members.tripod.com/jeff560/index.html
Another site maintained by Jeff Miller. It contains images of postage stamps featuring
mathematicians and mathematics, as well as links to other sites concerning mathematical
stamps.
Famous Problems in the History of Mathematics
www.learn.motion.com/lim/links/matlinks/famousProbs.htm
This site presents a portion of the history of mathematics by investigating some of the
great problems that have inspired mathematicians throughout the ages. The problems
included are suitable for middle school and high school students, with links to solutions, as
well as links to mathematicians' biographies and other math history sites.
Mathematics Archives –Topics in Modern Mathematics
http://archives.math.utk.edu/topics/history.html
Supported by Earl Fife at the University of Tennessee, the site provides links to important
recourses on History, Reports, Articles; Books, Journals, Preprints, Web Sites and
Databases etc. It covers all topics of modern mathematical sciences. Links to various
resources are organized by topics. Two additional features make this site a useful
database: use of additional keywords to describe a site; and use of icons to quickly show
the level of mathematical background to read the materials on the site and the type of
materials available on the site.
Hilbert's 23 Unsolved Problems
http://www.andrews.edu/~calkins/math/webtexts/toptexts/tophilpr.htm
In 1900, David Hilbert addressed the International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris. In
his address, he outlined 23 major mathematical problems that would be studied in the
next century. The address was not only a collection of problems; it was also his philosophy
of mathematics and problems important to that philosophy. This site gives in a tabular
form, the statement, present status and the reaction/contribution of various
mathematicians who have solved or have been attempting to prove or disprove these
problems.
Fermat's Last Theorem
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/proof/
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12. It contains several links including one to the The Mathematics of Fermat's Last Theorem, a
hypertext site created by Charles Daney which provides an overview of some of the
mathematics that has either been developed over the years to try to solve the problem
(directly or indirectly) or else which has been found to be relevant.
The History of Algebra
Teacherexchange.mde.k12.ms.us/teachnett/ history-of-algebra.htm
Created and maintained by DiAnn Sones, this web-quest site provides important links for
learning about the origin and meaning of the word algebra and about who developed
algebraic concepts. With available links it takes you on a journey through time and the
history of mathematics to discover the answers to these questions and allows you to
create a time-line to show how the mathematician and the mathematical developments fit
into history.
The Collected Works of Mathematicians: Index
http://www.math.cornell.edu/~library/collectedwks.html
Compiled and maintained by Steven Rockey of Cornell University, the site provides an
extensive bibliography of collected works and correspondence of mathematicians. The
items are assessed by author’s name on the Index page.
The Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/
It is a general site on philosophy which includes articles on the philosophy of, amongst
others, Aristotle, Descartes, and Poincaré.
Math and Mathematicians
www.mccsc.edu/~sschoole/mathematicians.html
Maintained by Jackson Creek Middle School, this site includes information about six
specific mathematicians and also links to other sites categorized into four groups: Women
Mathematicians, Mathematicians, Links and Photos and General Biographical Information.
Contributions of Different Cultures to the Development of...
www.gslis.utexas.edu/~vlibrary/edres/ pathfinders/akerman/bib.html
Maintained by Calvis, this page gives an annotated list of nearly 50 sites pertaining to
mathematics in different cultures and the history of mathematics in general.
Mathematics History Internet Sites
www3.anoka.k12.mn.us/curriculinks/math/history.htm
This site gives a list of Links to 12 History of Mathematics resources. It includes History of
numerals and counting, algebra, geometry, arithmetic and number theory, mathematical
analysis, probability and statistics.
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