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Presidential Address: The Use of Mathematics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2016
Extract
The use of Mathematics we understand as not merely utilitarian applications, such as those by which astronomy is employed in navigation, “whereby our nautical logbooks can be better kept, and water transport of all kinds has grown more commodious”; flight too can be made in the air, but also the cultivation at the same time of the intellect, to think correctly, and arrive at the right conclusion from data which are certain ; and the enlargement generally of the interest in this life.
And so our subject received its name from MA⊖HMATA, meaning disciplined exact knowledge, and formed an important branch in the old University ideal, to teach how to live a life, not merely to make a living. To keep the soul alive, body and soul together, and to cure intellectual timidity, the worst form of cowardice.
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- Copyright © The Mathematical Association 1914
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