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E-raamat: Instructing the Mathematical Imagination

  • Formaat: 259 pages
  • Sari: History of Mathematics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-13: 9781470481933
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Instructing the Mathematical Imagination
  • Formaat: 259 pages
  • Sari: History of Mathematics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-13: 9781470481933

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This book examines the creation and character of mathematical training at Bryn Mawr College between 1885 and 1926 under the leadership of Charlotte Angas Scott. Though designated as a college, Bryn Mawr boasted the worlds first graduate degree programs in which women taught women. Through detailed analysis of Scotts publications, student dissertations, and institutional records - including the colleges Journal Club Notebooks - the author reconstructs how a sustained, collaborative, and visually grounded style of mathematics emerged in this setting. Rather than focusing on biographical exceptionalism, the study situates Scott and her students within broader shifts in the American mathematical community, including changing access to education, publication, and professional networks.

Following Scotts own trajectory from England to the United States, the chapters explore the development of the mathematics department and trace themes such as algebraic representation in geometry, refined visual intuition, and early topology. The work addresses institutional constraints and the pedagogical means through which students learned to do original mathematics in a time of limited professional opportunity.

The book rewards those interested in the disciplinary, epistemological, and material conditions of mathematical research. The technical content is within the reach of advanced undergraduate students. It is of particular value to historians of science, historians of gender, scholars of mathematics education, and practicing geometers and topologists curious about the histories of their fields.
A Girton girl and the lady wrangler
Generals without armies: Mathematics at Cambridge beyond the Tripos
To organize a department of mathematics
Bryn Mawr in the mathematical landscape toward the end of the nineteenth
century
Motivation: To trace an unsuspected connection
Theme: Distinguishing between appearance and reality
Technique: Curve tracing
Better off in Noahs Ark: Bryn Mawr and professional mathematical societies
Pure imaginaries in the Mathematical Journal Club Notebook
Branches, knots, and topological research
The other half of the Bryn Mawr mathematics department
Readers, administrators, and professoresses
Remembering Bryn Mawr mathematics
Bibliography
Index
Jemma Lorenat, Pitzer College, Claremont, CA.