The case of the postcard, the boy on Dún Laoghaire pier and some school trigonometry
How Galileo began to cast doubt on the apparent axiomatic certainties of Euclid
Given enough opportunities, something extraordinary is bound to occur
Methods a century old are at the heart of modern atmospheric simulation
For mathematicians sustained effort and deep thought lay groundwork for discovery
That’s Math: Stephen Hawking’s cynical view of equations is a disservice to science
That’s Maths: The collection of letters shows Euler was not only a ‘master’ mathematician but also a master teacher
The stereotype is a dishevelled scatterbrain but in reality we come in all shapes and sizes
Swiss’s theorem was first attempt to apply probability outside realm of games of chance
Odds against 47 rollovers 1,500/1 but another more likely than picking the winning numbers
That’s Maths: Times and distances are of vital importance in the mountains
Her brilliant work is still the standard reference in French on Newtonian mechanics
The starting point for reverse maths is a base theory that is strong enough to state the theorems of interest, but not strong enough to prove them
In the ‘calculus wars’ Britain claimed it was invented by Newton, while the Germans insisted it was Leibniz
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