Ramanujin obviously showed his instinctive torch for numbers and mathematics from a very young age, which was his first great inspiration when he was 15 years old. Teenagers are keen to add more contents to the theorem set in the book, develop their own mathematical concepts and formulas, start a journey of exploration, and finally bring him into the recognized stage of mathematical elite.
? 2. Stefan Banach is considered as one of the most famous mathematicians in the 20th century and the founder of modern functional analysis. He has contributed to the development of topological vector space theory and the innovation of measurement and integration theory. As a child, Barnah was raised by his father in a family other than his own, although they still maintained a good relationship. His economic situation is quite stable, and he has been encouraged to use his recognized academic talents since he was a child.
? Oliver heaviside, a self-taught mathematician and physicist in Britain, was born in London. He predicted the existence of the ionosphere, that is, the earth's atmosphere reflects radio waves, and used most of his work in electrical research, using operational calculus (now called Laplace transform method) to study the transient current in the network.
? Mary Everest Bull is a self-taught mathematician who was forced to drop out of school at the age of 1 1. She is most famous for her math works, such as the fun of philosophy and algebra, and her progressive math teaching to young people, including using interesting activities to help them learn.
At the beginning of his childhood, Bull lived in France and received a math education in a private school. Then she had to return to England at the age of 1 1, but this did not stop her from pursuing her interest in mathematics through self-study. At last, she began to take the course of george boole, a mathematician and professor at Queen's College-and he became her future husband.
? 5. Although Florence Nightingale, the well-known lady with lanterns, is famous for her great heroic contribution to the nursing cause during the Crimean War, most of us ignore-or don't realize-her status as a talented statistician. From a very young age, Nightingale showed extraordinary talent in mathematics and excelled in this subject under the guidance of her father. She later made full use of her knowledge to improve the quality of medical care in Britain.
She devoted most of her energy to the collection and verification of data, revealed the dangerous influence of poor sanitary conditions in hospitals, and identified it as the chief culprit leading to the death of patients, thus greatly preventing the deaths of military and civilian medical institutions at that time.
? 6. Benjamin Banneker Although Benjamin Banneker is famous as an African-American scientist and civil rights leader, he is undoubtedly a versatile man. He is also excellent in mathematics, and he used his knowledge and skills to help investigate the original border of Colombia. At some point in his life, he even exchanged letters with Thomas Jefferson, who was about to become the president of the United States (he thought that blacks were not as clever as whites) on the topics of slavery and racial equality.
? 7. Thomas Fuller ("Virginia Calculator") summed up the list of famous mathematicians who never went to college, which is probably the most unconventional and extraordinary of all stories: Thomas Fuller, known as "Virginia Calculator", was a native African who was kidnapped in his motherland 14 and sold to plantation owners as slaves. People around him discovered his extraordinary God-given mathematical ability in a hurry, and finally he was discovered by anti-slavery activists, who used him to openly challenge the wrong idea that blacks were mentally inferior to whites.
In the process of social development, mathematics, as a cultural phenomenon, has attracted people's attention. In recent years, mathematical culture