ProofWiki:Mathematicians/Sorted By Nation/Greece
For more comprehensive information on the lives and works of mathematicians through the ages, see the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, created by John J. O'Connor and Edmund F. Robertson.
- "The army of those who have made at least one definite contribution to mathematics as we know it soon becomes a mob as we look back over history; 6,000 or 8,000 names press forward for some word from us to preserve them from oblivion, and once the bolder leaders have been recognised it becomes largely a matter of arbitrary, illogical legislation to judge who of the clamouring multitude shall be permitted to survive and who be condemned to be forgotten."
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Greece
Thales
c. 625 – 547 B.C.E.
Greek mathematician, scientist, philosopher and astronomer, who (amongst other things) predicted a solar eclipse in 585 BCE.
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Pythagoras of Samos
between 580 and 572 B.C.E. – between 500 and 490 B.C.E.
Greek philosopher whose contributions to mathematics were perhaps more limited than is generally believed.
Best known for being said to have provided the first known proof of Pythagoras's Theorem (or one of his students did) which had probably been known to the ancient Egyptians.
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Zeno of Elea
c. 490 – c. 430 B.C.E.
Greek: Ζήνων ὁ Ἐλεάτης.
Pre-Socratic philosopher of southern Italy.
Member of the Eleatic School founded by Parmenides. Aristotle called him the "inventor of the dialectic".
Best known for his paradoxes, which Bertrand Russell described as "immeasurably subtle and profound".
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Oenopides of Chios
c. 490 – c. 420 B.C.E.
Mathematician, geometer and astronomer.
Little is known about him except that he came from the island of Chios, and is generally believed to have lived and worked in Athens in his youth.
Estimated the tilt of the Earth's axis with respect to the ecliptic as $24^\circ$.
Appears to have introduced the rule that all geometric constructions must be done with a straightedge and compass.
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Hippocrates of Chios
c. 470 – 410 B.C.E.
Mathematician, geometer and astronomer.
The first to write a systematic textbook on geometry, Elements of Geometry, only a fragment of which survives.
Invented the technique of reduction, that is, transforming a mathematical problem into a more general, easily solvable one.
May have been a pupil of Oenopides.
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Socrates
c. 469 – 399 B.C.E.
Socrates (Greek: Σωκράτης, Sōkrátēs) was a Greek philosopher, a teacher of Plato.
Although no writings of his survive (if there ever were any), much of his philosophy has been documented in the works of Plato.
Executed by hemlock in 399 BCE supposedly for the crime of corrupting the young.
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Democritus
c. 460 – 370 B.C.E.
Democritus (Greek: Δημόκριτος, Dēmokritos, chosen of the people) was a Greek mathematician and philosopher, most famous for his atomic theory of the universe.
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Plato
428/427 – 348/347 B.C.E.
Plato (Greek: Πλάτων, Plátōn, "broad") was a Greek philosopher, a student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle.
Importantly documents the philosophy of Socrates.
Of particular importance was his insistence on the idea of proof.
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Eudoxus of Cnidus
410 or 408 B.C.E. – 355 or 347 B.C.E.
Greek astronomer and mathematician who, among other things:
- Pioneered work on proportion;
- Introduced the astronomical globe;
- Developed the method of exhaustion, this being an early precursor to integral calculus. This was later exploited by Archimedes.
Student of Plato.
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Aristotle
384 – 322 B.C.E.
Aristotle (Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης, Aristotélēs) was a Greek philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great.
Phenomenally influential philosopher whose works (for better or for worse) shaped the entirety of the intellectual development of the Western world for over a millennium.
Most important from the point of view of mathematics for formulating the Principle of Non-Contradiction and the Law of the Excluded Middle.
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Aristaeus the Elder
c. 370 B.C.E. – c. 300 B.C.E.
Differentiated by Pappus of Alexandria from another later Aristaeus whose existence is no longer recorded.
Did considerable work on conic sections, but this was rendered obsolete by subsequent work by Apollonius.
Proved that "the same circle circumscribes both the pentagon of the dodecahedron and the triangle of the icosahedron inscribed in the same sphere."
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Aristarchus of Samos
310 – 230 B.C.E.
Greek astronomer and mathematician who used parallax to determine the relative distances of the moon and the sun.
His result was inaccurate, based as it was on faulty input data, but the method was sound.
One of the first to suggest a heliocentric universe.
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Euclid
c. 300 B.C.E.
In Greek: Εὐκλείδης (Eukleídēs), also known as Euclid of Alexandria.
Little is known about him, apart from:
- He taught in Alexandria (then a Macedonian colony);
- He assembled the geometry text The Elements, possibly the most famous mathematics text book of all time.
Archimedes
c. 287 – 212 B.C.E.
Known as Archimedes of Syracuse.
Greek mathematician, physicist, astronomer, engineer and general all-round inventor.
Perfected the method of exhaustion.
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Eratosthenes of Cyrene
c. 276 – c. 195 B.C.E.
Ancient Greek: Ἐρατοσθένης.
Greek geometer and astronomer best known for his estimate of the size of the Earth.
Also famous for his Sieve of Eratosthenes.
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Apollonius of Perga
c. 262 – c. 190 B.C.E.
Ancient Greek: Ἀπολλώνιος, also known (in the Latin form) as Pergaeus. Greek geometer and astronomer best known for his work on conic sections, in which he uses techniques in analytic geometry which anticipated the work of Descartes.
Greatly influential, he provided the names of the ellipse, parabola and hyperbola.
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Theodosius of Bithynia
c. 160 – c. 100 B.C.E.
Greek astronomer and mathematician best known for writing Sphaerics, a book on spherical geometry.
According to Vitruvius, he is supposed to have invented a sundial which would work anywhere in the world.
Sometimes confused with various other writers called Theodosius. On this basis, often erroneously believed to have been born in Tripolis.
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Proclus Lycaeus
412 – 485
Greek philosopher (usually known as Proclus, also as Proclus Diadochus) who among other things produced a commentary on Book 1 of Euclid's The Elements.
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Constantin Carathéodory
1873 – 1950
Otherwise known as Constantine Karatheodori (in Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Καραθεοδωρή).
Greek mathematician who contributed to the theory of functions of a real variable, the calculus of variations and measure theory.
Also worked on rationalisation of the theory of thermodynamics.
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Yiannis Nicholas Moschovakis
b. 1938
In Greek: Γιάννης Μοσχοβάκης.
Greek mathematician known for his work in the fields of set theory, descriptive set theory and recursion theory.
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References
- ↑ Eric Temple Bell, Men of Mathematics, 1937, Victor Gollancz, London.