George Sarton Quote

The concatenations of mathematical ideas are not divorced from life, far from it, but they are less influenced than other scientific ideas by accidents, and it is perhaps more possible, and more permissible, for a mathematician than for any other man to secrete himself in a tower of ivory.


The Study of The History of Mathematics, The Study of the History of Mathematics (pp. 19-20)


The concatenations of mathematical ideas are not divorced from life, far from it, but they are less influenced than other scientific ideas by...

The concatenations of mathematical ideas are not divorced from life, far from it, but they are less influenced than other scientific ideas by...

The concatenations of mathematical ideas are not divorced from life, far from it, but they are less influenced than other scientific ideas by...

The concatenations of mathematical ideas are not divorced from life, far from it, but they are less influenced than other scientific ideas by...