Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T08:36:54.079Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“A source of much rational entertainment”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2016

M. P. Black
Affiliation:
School of Education, The University, Exeter
A. G. Howson
Affiliation:
Faculty of Mathematical Studies, The University, Southampton SO9 5NH

Extract

“A certain degree of mathematical science, and indeed no inconsiderable degree, is perhaps more widely diffused in England, than in any other country in the world. The Ladies’ Diary, with several other periodicals and popular publications of the same kind, are the best proofs of this assertion. In these, many curious problems, not of the highest order indeed, but still having a considerable degree of difficulty, and far beyond the mere elements of science are to be met with; and the great number of ingenious men who take a share in proposing and answering these questions, whom one has never heard of anywhere else, is not a little surprising. Nothing of the same kind, we believe, is to be found in any other country.”

These words of John Playfair’s are quoted by R. C. Archibald in his survey of the “minor English mathematical serials” which appeared in the celebratory 200th issue of this Gazette. Archibald describes how, early in the eighteenth century, serials containing elementary mathematical problems began to appear. Thus, during a century or more when mathematics had still to establish itself in the curriculum of the country’s leading endowed schools, numerous attempts were made to interest the ‘reading’ public in the subject and to serve those readers who were already ‘scientific’. An earlier, extensive survey of such publications was undertaken in the Mechanics Magazine (1848-1853) by T. T. Wilkinson [3] (who also wrote, inter alia, on that arcane (to two Yorkists!) subject “The origin and progress of the study of geometry in Lancashire”). Little, however, appears to have been done in recent years to examine these early attempts to diffuse mathematical knowledge: to study the mathematics contained in such periodicals and columns, how it was learned and enjoyed, and the people who set and solved the problems. This, in a small way, is what is attempted in this investigation. As our subject we chose to study the mathematical column which appeared in the York Courant during the early years of the nineteenth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Playfair, J., Laplace’s Mécanique céleste (unsigned review), Edin. Rev. 22, 249284 (1808).Google Scholar
2. Archibald, R. C., Notes on some minor English mathematical serials, Mathl. Gaz. 14, 379400 (No. 200, April 1929).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3. Wilkinson, T. T., Mathematical periodicals (50 articles concerning 30 periodicals), Mechanics Magazine 5459 (1848-53).Google Scholar
4. Eden, P., Dictionary of land surveyors and local cartographers of Great Britain and Ireland, 1550-1850. Dawson (1976).Google Scholar
5. Taylor, E. G. R., The mathematical practitioners of Hanoverian England, 1714-1840. Cambridge University Press (1966).Google Scholar
6. Hutton, C., entry “Thomas Simpson” in A philosophical and mathematical dictionary (2nd edition) (1815).Google Scholar
7. Cranfield, G. A., The development of the provincial newspaper, 1700-1760. Cambridge University Press (1962).Google Scholar
8. Goldsmith, N. A., The Englishman’s mathematics as seen in general periodicals in the eighteenth century, Maths Teacher 46, 253259 (1953).Google Scholar
9. Pedersen, O., The philomaths of 18th century England, Centaurus 8, 238262 (1963).Google Scholar
10. Wallis, P. J., British philomaths—mid eighteenth century and earlier, Centaurus 17, 301314 (1973).Google Scholar