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MathPrinceps's profile
Laurens Gunnarsen
Laurens Gunnarsen
Laurens Gunnarsen
@MathPrinceps

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Laurens Gunnarsen

@MathPrinceps

Mathematical physicist and mentor to mathematically talented youth. Talent is that which bridges the gap between what can be taught and what must be learned.

Joined June 2012

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    1. Steven Strogatz‏Verified account @stevenstrogatz 9 Aug 2016
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      Steven Strogatz Retweeted The Economist

      Euler is the greatest mathematician ever, in my opinion (Gauss, Archimedes, & Newton are up there too)https://twitter.com/theeconomist/status/763165084533268480 …

      Steven Strogatz added,

      The EconomistVerified account @TheEconomist
      The most productive and influential mathematician most people have never heard of http://econ.st/2bbynjE  pic.twitter.com/aD9PIykidH
      12 replies 60 retweets 116 likes
    2. Laurens Gunnarsen‏ @MathPrinceps 10 Aug 2016
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      Replying to @stevenstrogatz

      Gauss disagreed with you. He awarded top honors unequivocally to Newton. And Gauss didn't defer to many people.

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    3. Steven Strogatz‏Verified account @stevenstrogatz 10 Aug 2016
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      Replying to @MathPrinceps

      And if we include mathematical physics as part of math, I agree that Newton is (possibly) greater than Euler.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    4. Steven Strogatz‏Verified account @stevenstrogatz 10 Aug 2016
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      Replying to @stevenstrogatz @MathPrinceps

      But for contributions to pure math, I feel Euler and Gauss far outshine Newton.

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    5. Laurens Gunnarsen‏ @MathPrinceps 10 Aug 2016
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      Replying to @stevenstrogatz

      Gauss evidently thought he would have been able to do anything Euler had done. But he felt quite differently about Newton.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Laurens Gunnarsen‏ @MathPrinceps 10 Aug 2016
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      Replying to @MathPrinceps @stevenstrogatz

      What most impressed Gauss about Newton was not the scope of his work, but the quality of the thought that went into it.

      9:24 AM - 10 Aug 2016
      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Laurens Gunnarsen‏ @MathPrinceps 10 Aug 2016
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          Replying to @MathPrinceps @stevenstrogatz

          It took a lot to inspire awe in Gauss, but Newton's thinking did the trick. And Newton felt the same way about Archimedes.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        3. Laurens Gunnarsen‏ @MathPrinceps 10 Aug 2016
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          Replying to @MathPrinceps @stevenstrogatz

          Indeed, there's pretty clear evidence that Newton believed himself merely to be rediscovering lost results of Archimedes.

          2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
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