The recreational mathematics of activities of ordinary nineteenth century Americans: A study of two mathematics puzzle columns and their contributors

Date

2019

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

YU Faculty Profile

Abstract

This study analyses two American recreational mathematics columns from the end of the nineteenth century—one from Atlanta, Georgia’s Sunny South and one from Wilmington, Delaware’s Delaware Gazette and State Journal. Each was an active forum, used by ordinary, educated laypeople to participate in a culture of mathematics by contributing problems and solutions, and in some cases entering into heated discussions. This period was one of dramatic change in American mathematics, in which researchers, educators and textbook authors ended their isolation from developments in Europe and shifted emphasis from rote procedures and practical calculations toward reasoning about abstract mathematics. The mathematics columns in Sunny South and the Delaware Gazette reflect these two different views of mathematics that were percolating in American culture at the time and offer a window into the mathematical beliefs and understanding of the ordinary Americans who contributed to them.

Description

Scholarly article

Keywords

recreational mathematics, Sunny South, History of mathematics and mathematicians, Mathematics in America

Citation

Zelbo, S. E. (2019). The recreational mathematics of activities of ordinary nineteenth century Americans: A study of two mathematics puzzle columns and their contributors. British Journal for the History of Mathematics, 34(3), 155-178.