Definitions of Mathematics
Definitions of Mathematics
Early definitions[edit]
Aristotle defined mathematics as:
The science of quantity.
In Aristotle's classification of the sciences, discrete quantities were studied by arithmetic, continuous
quantities by geometry.[3]
Auguste Comte's definition tried to explain the role of mathematics in coordinating phenomena in all
other fields:[4]
The science of indirect measurement.[5] Auguste Comte 1851
The "indirectness" in Comte's definition refers to determining quantities that cannot be measured
directly, such as the distance to planets or the size of atoms, by means of their relations to quantities
that can be measured directly.[6]
Mathematics is mental activity which consists in carrying out, one after the other, those mental
constructions which are inductive and effective.
meaning that by combining fundamental ideas, one reaches a definite result.
Formalism denies both physical and mental meaning to mathematics, making the symbols and rules
themselves the object of study.[10] A formalist definition:
Mathematics is the manipulation of the meaningless symbols of a first-order language according to
explicit, syntactical rules.
Still other approaches emphasize pattern, order, or structure. For example:
Mathematics is the classification and study of all possible patterns.
certainly not just a fixed body of knowledge, its growth is not confined to inventing new numbers, and
its hidden tendrils pervade every aspect of modern life. [16] Ian Stewart