All Quotes by Mathematics, from the points of view of the Mathematician and of the Physicist
“In the scientific world... decidedly vague and narrow conceptions of the functions of Mathematical thinking are current.In such circles, the notion is extremely common that the sole function of Mathematics is to provide the means of carrying out... calculations... and thus that Mathematics plays in them a comparatively humble part analogous to that of a mechanical tool.”
“Mathematical thinking...has played a most important part in the formation of the concepts with which the Physical Sciences work... [I]t has reduced the originally vague conceptions which arise in connection with physical observation to precise forms in which they can be exhibited as measurable quantities.”
“Mathematical thought is... the most all-pervading and the most highly specialized department of mental activity.”
“The more closely men scrutinized natural phenomena, at first for practical reasons, and later from intellectual curiosity, the more things and processes they found to have aspects which are measurable, and the more they were able to employ their developing Mathematical processes and concepts for the precise characterization of various aspects of the world of phenomena.”
“But... the natural development of Mathematical thought, starting as it did in connection with the more obvious aspects of sensuous experience, under the pressure of physical needs, brings it to a region reaching far beyond that in which the primitive intuitions of time, space, and matter formed the exclusive subject matter of the Science.”
“The ultimate aim of the Physicist, even [the]... experimental[ist], is much higher than that of attaining to a merely empirical knowledge of facts. His real object is to classify facts in such a way as to refer them to general laws which are of a more or less abstract character, and which involve concepts of schematic representations that require... the aid of the Mathematician.”
“Although the theoretical Physicist has for his real aim the formulation of abstract schemes for the description and correlation of the physical phenomena which he observes, with the Mathematician processes of abstraction must go very much further than with the Physicist.”
“A strong tendency of Mathematics in its later developments is to split up notions, originally undivided, into components, and to proceed to deal with these components in isolation, and often in separate branches of study.”
“Not only did Mathematical Science take its origin in the necessities and interests... in the physical world, but at every stage of its development the problems of Physics have been the source of the ideas which have directed the Mathematician, and from which new paths of investigation have been suggested...”
“But every great problem... from the physical side... has given rise to a train of ideas... and has started a host of questions... [which] have led him in most cases far beyond the original domain...”
“Mathematics can in the long run be developed to the highest degree of perfection, not only from the point of view of specialists within its own domain, but also as constituting an essential component of the intellectual life and stock of ideas of the world, only on the condition that it is allowed full freedom of self-expression.”
“The utilitarian notion... has the fatal limitation that it attempts to assign limits to what is, or may in the future become, useful, in accordance with a more or less arbitrarily restricted standard of what constitutes utility.”
“When the exigencies of Physics suggest to the Mathematician some... special problem for solution, he is impelled to search for some generalization, some law, under which a whole class of analogous processes or problems can be subsumed. ...The Physicist also ...is really occupied in attempting to exhibit ...some general law under which a whole class of phenomena can be subsumed. A narrow utilitarianism would be as fatal to the growth of Physics as to that of Mathematics.”
“The period in which Physical Mathematics was applied with such great success to continuous media probably reached its culmination in Maxwell's equations of Electrodynamics which are now usually regarded as representing the average effects exhibited when actual discreteness is smoothed out.”
“In our own time the centre of physical interest has transferred itself, in connection with Electromagnetism, to the molecular and sub-molecular domain, in which discrete objects become the subject of scrutiny.”
“The boundaries between Physics and Chemistry have been broken down. In this region of investigation... Physicists... have been rewarded by the discovery, during the last two decades, of a crowd of remarkable facts, probably destined to have the most far-reaching influence upon our conceptions of the material world.”
“It has been said that the Theory of Numbers is a subject which has never been soiled by any practical application. Who can be absolutely sure that even so apparently transcendental a branch of thought as this will always remain undefiled by the contaminating touch of physical application?”