Gauss later solved this puzzle about his birthdate in the context of finding the date of Easterderiving methods to compute the date in both past and future years. In his memorial on Gauss, Wolfgang Sartorius von Waltershausen says that when Gauss was barely three years old he corrected a math error his father made; and that when he was seven, he confidently solved an arithmetic series problem faster than anyone else in his class of students.
Lived — Carl Friedrich Gauss was the last man who knew of all mathematics. He was probably the greatest mathematician the world has ever known — although perhaps Archimedes, Isaac Newton, and Leonhard Euler also have legitimate claims to the title.
In addition to mathematics, Gauss made powerful contributions to a wide range of mathematical and physical sciences including astronomy, optics, electricity, magnetism, statistics, and surveying. Money was always in short supply. From the very beginning, Carl showed an unusual talent for numbers; he could calculate before he learned to speak.
School Inage seven, Carl started at St. He hoped Carl would become a laborer and help support the family. Broadening Horizons Carl began to be tutored by Martin Bartels, his elder by eight years, well-educated, and a talented mathematician. Soon Bartels was inspired by his student to devote his own career entirely to mathematics, eventually becoming a professor.
The two would be friends for life. By the time he was 10, Carl had independently derived the binomial theorem — a truly remarkable feat.
Word of the young genius reached the ears of the Duke of Brunswick, who generously agreed to fund his education. By the time he was 18, he had completed his degree in mathematics. He dug unusually deeply into the subject.
His hero was Archimedes. He was already far ahead of most mathematics professors in both breadth and depth of expertise. He immersed himself in modern mathematics.
He also attended lectures in linguistics, physics, and astronomy. He actually borrowed more humanities books from the library than mathematics books.
Although he knew his abilities were special, his fellow students did not see him as the wholly devoted and brilliant mathematician that he was. They regarded him as modest and normal. Construction of the Heptadecagon A Heptadecagon After just six months, Gauss solved a problem that had stymied mathematicians for 2, years — the construction of a regular sided figure, the heptadecagon, by straightedge and compass alone.
The Ancient Greeks had shown that regular 3, 5, and sided polygons can be constructed using only a straightedge and compass, but had not been able to discover any more such shapes.
In fact, Gauss went beyond even the heptadecagon. He discovered a mathematical formula to find all regular polygons that can be constructed using only straightedge and compass — and found Following the sided figure are the 51, 85,…. He kept a diary of his discoveries, beginning with the heptadecagon.
The diary, listing discoveries, was lost for over 40 years after his death. The year was a miracle year, with 49 entries — some of which are so short or arcane that their meaning is obscure. Entry 18, whose meaning is known, comes from July 10, Tipping his hat to Archimedes, Gauss noted in his diary: Gauss was perhaps the last person to master every aspect of mathematics.
Today, even someone as gifted as Gauss cannot know all of mathematics; the subject has grown too large.
Number Theory In his time as a student, Gauss made many momentous discoveries in number theory, such as the one above. Number theory was his favorite field.
Later, he would famously say: Inage 24, he published one of the greatest works in the history of mathematics — Disquisitiones Arithmeticae. He chose to write the book in perfect classical Latin, writing most of it three years before it was published.
In it he recorded formal proofs of many of his earlier discoveries.Carl F. Gauss Biography Carl F. Gauss was a German mathematician and astronomer who is ranked as one of history's most influential mathematicians.
This biography of Carl F. Gauss provides detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss was born on April 30, in the city of Brunswick, Germany.
His mother was Dorothea Benze and his father was Gebhard Dietrich Gauss. Carl’s mother was intelligent, but illiterate; she had received no education was a housemaid before marriage. + free ebooks online. Did you know that you can help us produce ebooks by proof-reading just one page a day?
Go to: Distributed Proofreaders. Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (/ (), explores Gauss's life and work through a lens of historical fiction, contrasting them with those of the German explorer Alexander von Humboldt. A film version directed by Detlev Buck was released in Known for: See full list.
Romanticism: Romanticism, attitude or intellectual orientation that characterized many works of literature, painting, music, architecture, criticism, and historiography in Western civilization over a period from the late 18th to the midth century.
Romanticism can be seen as a rejection of the precepts of. A Way of Being by Carl Rogers - A Way of Being by Carl Rogers In the book by Carl Rogers, A Way of Being, Rogers describes his life in the way he sees it as an older gentleman in his seventies.