Blog Post Nov 08th
Euclid Alone Has Looked on Beauty Bare
Euclid of Alexandria was the
most famous Greek mathematician and was referred to the “father of geometry”. His most announced work was The Elements which
recorded a system of rigorous mathematical proofs. The Elements covers his work on geometry,
algebra and number theory which is seen as one of the most influential mathematical
work in history.
In Edna St. Vincent Millay’s
poem, she refers Euclid as “the second coming of Christ” (McGee, n.d.). Millay’s admiration for Euclid has made her set
his’s intelligent insight above the rest of the mankind. She claims that Euclid is “alone” the one who
can see beauty of mathematics with the rest as Praters. This conclusion comes from Euclid’ genius contribution
on the beautiful mathematical proofs in pure mathematics. Using biblical reference,
the poet alludes that Euclid has opened the door of a new way of thinking for
mathematics, which put him in a position of “mathematical savior” and using The
Element to bring a new light to people (McGee, n.d.).
In response to Millay’s
work, David Kramer has dismissed the idea of “Euclid as the Jesus of Mathematics”.
He questions the ignorance of Millay for
not seeing great contributions from other intelligent mathematicians in history,
but rather, putting one man in a holy position.
I admire the intelligence of Euclid but believe that the advancement of mathematics is more of a collective effort made by many mathematicians throughout history. The mathematics we know today has taken hundreds of years of evolution to formulate the ground-breaking theorems and theories. We can easily name some distinguished mathematicians and their works in history: Issac Newton (Newton’s Law of Motion &Calculus), Leonhard Euler (Euler’s Equation), Carl Friedrich Guass (Guass’ Law), Fibonacci (Fibonacci Sequence), and Bernhard Riemann (Riemann Sum) etc. It is hard to imagine that one genius’ work would form the whole system of mathematics, although Euclid does change the thinking and approach to mathematics to his successors.
Reference
McGee, Ryan. (n.d.). A Mathematical Jesus: An Explication
of Edna St. Vincent Millay’s “Euclid Alone Has Looked on Beauty Bare”. Life
Orange. Retrieved from
https://lifeorange.com/writing/writing2.htm
Good research and analysis, Ivy! Thanks!
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