Ian Stewart Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Ian Stewart's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Professor Ian Stewart's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 17 quotes on this page collected since September 24, 1945! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
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  • Chaos is lawless behavior governed entirely by law.

    Freedom   Law   Liberty  
    "Does God Play Dice? The New Mathematics of Chaos" by Ian Stewart, New York: Penguin Books, (p. 17), 1989.
  • Mathematicians need proofs to keep them honest. All technical areas of human activity need reality checks. It is not enough to believe that something works, that it is a good way to proceed, or even that it is true. We need to know why it's true. Otherwise, we won't know anything at all.

    Believe   Reality   Needs  
    Ian Stewart (2007). “Letters to a Young Mathematician”, p.79, Basic Books
  • One of the biggest problems of mathematics is to explain to everyone else what it is all about. The technical trappings of the subject, its symbolism and formality, its baffling terminology, its apparent delight in lengthy calculations: these tend to obscure its real nature. A musician would be horrified if his art were to be summed up as "a lot of tadpoles drawn on a row of lines"; but that"s all that the untrained eye can see in a page of sheet music... In the same way, the symbolism of mathematics is merely its coded form, not its substance.

    Art   Real   Eye  
  • There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary numerals, and those who don't.

    People   World   Linux  
    Ian Stewart (2010). “Professor Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities”, p.89, Profile Books
  • Religion hinges upon faith, politics hinges upon who can tell the most convincing lies or maybe just shout the loudest, but science hinges upon whether its conclusions resembe what actually happens.

    Ian Stewart, Jack Cohen (1999). “Figments of Reality: The Evolution of the Curious Mind”, p.36, Cambridge University Press
  • First is first, and second is nowhere.

    Running   Firsts  
  • Mathematics is the science of patterns, and nature exploits just about every pattern that there is.

    Ian Stewart (2008). “Nature's Numbers: The Unreal Reality Of Mathematics”, p.18, Basic Books
  • If our brains were simple enough for us to understand them, we'd be so simple that we couldn't.

    Simple   Brain   Enough  
    Ian Stewart, Jack Cohen (2000). “The Collapse of Chaos: Discovering Simplicity in a Complex World”, p.13, Penguin UK
  • The power of equations lies in the philosophically difficult correspondence between mathematics, a collective creation of human minds, and an external physical reality. Equations model deep patterns in the outside world. By learning to value equations, and to read the stories they tell, we can uncover vital features of the world around us.

    Lying   Reality   Mind  
    Ian Stewart (2012). “Seventeen Equations that Changed the World”, p.9, Profile Books
  • Mathematicians are beginning to view order and chaos as two distinct manifestations of an underlying determinism. And neither state exists in isolation. The typical system can exist in a variety of states, some ordered, some chaotic. Instead of two opposed polarities, there is a continuous spectrum. As harmony and discord combine in musical beauty, so order and chaos combine in mathematical [and physical] beauty.

    Beauty   Art   Views  
  • Two centuries ago Carl Friedrich Gauss, one of the greatest mathematicians and a founder of number theory, described his brainchild as "the queen of mathematics." Queens are regal, but they are also largely decorative, and this nuance was not lost on Gauss.

    Beauty   Art   Queens  
  • During the past fifty years, more mathematics has been created than in all previous ages put together.

    Past   Discovery   Years  
    Ian Stewart (1996). “From Here to Infinity”, p.12, Oxford Paperbacks
  • To criticize mathematics for its abstraction is to miss the point entirely. Abstraction is what makes mathematics work. If you concentrate too closely on too limited an application of a mathematical idea, you rob the mathematician of his most important tools: analogy, generality, and simplicity. Mathematics is the ultimate in technology transfer.

  • Our teaching of mathematics revolves around a fundamental conflict. Rightly or wrongly, students are required to master a series of mathematical concepts and techniques, and anything that might divert them from doing so is deemed unnecessary. Putting mathematics into its cultural context, explaining what is has done for humanity, telling the story of its historical development, or pointing out the wealth of unsolved problems or even the existence of topics that do not make it into school textbooks leaves less time to prepare for the exam. So most of these things aren't discussed.

  • I don't want to convince you that mathematics is useful. It is, but utility is not the only criterion for value to humanity. Above all, I want to convince you that mathematics is beautiful, surprising, enjoyable, and interesting. In fact, mathematics is the closest that we humans get to true magic. How else to describe the patterns in our heads that - by some mysterious agency - capture patterns of the universe around us? Mathematics connects ideas that otherwise seem totally unrelated, revealing deep similarities that subsequently show up in nature.

  • The flapping of a single butterfly's wing today produces a tiny change in the state of the atmosphere. Over a period of time, what the atmosphere actually does diverges from what it would have done. So, in a month's time, a tornado that would have devastated the Indonesian coast doesn't happen. Or maybe one that wasn't going to happen, does.

  • ...a major triumph of mathematical imagination: the use of visual imagery to condense a large quantity of information into a single comprehensible picture... Mathematicians are just beginning to understand these basic building blocks of change and to analyze how they combine. The methodology involved has a very different spirit from traditional modeling with differential equations: it is more like chemistry than calculus, requiring careful counterpoint between analysis and synthesis.

    Beauty   Art   Block  
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 17 quotes from the Professor Ian Stewart, starting from September 24, 1945! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
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