Mathematics classes are crowded with vital material and it is hard to find time to also consider the PEOPLE of mathematics -- one way to do this is by offering poems. In the September issue of Math Horizons, my brief article, "Mathematics and Poetry" offers a variety of samples -- introducing poems by mathematicians (including William Rowan Hamilton) and poems about mathematicians (Brian McCabe writing about Sophie Germaine, Cathryn Essinger writing about her super-logical brother).
Here are a pair of lines from Voltaire about mathematician and scientist Émilie Du Châtelet:
She has, I assure you, a genius rare.
With Horace and Newton, she can compare.
A wonderful poem to add to those quoted in the article is in the voice of a math student who protests discrimination; it is by Caribbean-American poet Audre Lorde (1934-1992) and entitled "Hanging Fire" -- the complete poem is posted here.
I should have been on the Math Team
my marks were better than his
Here is a link to a pdf of the Math Horizons article. The article does not contain web-links, BUT each of the poems may be found by searching this blog using the poet's name.
Showing posts with label Emilie du Chatelet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emilie du Chatelet. Show all posts
Thursday, September 13, 2018
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
She argued for Newton's physics
Here, by Voltaire, is a poem about mathematician/scientist Émilie du Châtelet (1706-1749) -- who explained Newton's physics but was not remembered for her own work as she should have been.
At this link, one may begin to learn about du Châtelet's many contributions.
The Divine Émilie by Voltaire (1694-1778)
Here's a portrait of my Émilie:
She's both a beauty and a friend to me.
Her keen imagination is always in bloom.
Her noble mind brightens every room.
She's possessed of charm and wit,
Though sometimes shows too much of it.
She has, I assure you, a genius rare.
With Horace and Newton, she can compare.
Yet, she will sit for hours and hours
With people who bore her
And card-playing gamblers.
At this link, one may begin to learn about du Châtelet's many contributions.
The Divine Émilie by Voltaire (1694-1778)
Here's a portrait of my Émilie:
She's both a beauty and a friend to me.
Her keen imagination is always in bloom.
Her noble mind brightens every room.
She's possessed of charm and wit,
Though sometimes shows too much of it.
She has, I assure you, a genius rare.
With Horace and Newton, she can compare.
Yet, she will sit for hours and hours
With people who bore her
And card-playing gamblers.
Labels:
Emilie du Chatelet,
Isaac Newton,
Voltaire
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