Christian Heinrich von Dillmann Quote

Mathematics, too, is a language, and as concerns its structure and content it is the most perfect language which exists, superior to any vernacular; indeed, since it is understood by every people, mathematics may be called the language of languages. Through it, as it were, nature herself speaks; through it the Creator of the world has spoken, and through it the Preserver of the world continues to speak.


p. 5 - Die Mathematik die Fackelträgerin einer neuen Zeit (Stuttgart, 1889)


Mathematics, too, is a language, and as concerns its structure and content it is the most perfect language which exists, superior to any vernacular;...

Mathematics, too, is a language, and as concerns its structure and content it is the most perfect language which exists, superior to any vernacular;...

Mathematics, too, is a language, and as concerns its structure and content it is the most perfect language which exists, superior to any vernacular;...

Mathematics, too, is a language, and as concerns its structure and content it is the most perfect language which exists, superior to any vernacular;...