Top 13 Quotes & Sayings by E. T. Bell

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish mathematician E. T. Bell.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
E. T. Bell

Eric Temple Bell was a Scottish-born mathematician and science fiction writer who lived in the United States for most of his life. He published non-fiction using his given name and fiction as John Taine.

If indeed, as Hilbert asserted, mathematics is a meaningless game played with meaningless marks on paper, the only mathematical experience to which we can refer is the making of marks on paper.
Guided only by their feeling for symmetry, simplicity, and generality, and an indefinable sense of the fitness of things, creative mathematicians now, as in the past, are inspired by the art of mathematics rather than by any prospect of ultimate usefulness.
The mistakes and unresolved difficulties of the past in mathematics have always been the opportunities of its future. — © E. T. Bell
The mistakes and unresolved difficulties of the past in mathematics have always been the opportunities of its future.
The longer mathematics lives the more abstract - and therefore, possibly also the more practical - it becomes.
Out of fifty mathematical papers presented in brief at such a meeting, it is a rare mathematician indeed who really understands what more than half a dozen are about.
Science makes no pretension to eternal truth or absolute truth.
The pursuit of pretty formulas and neat theorems can no doubt quickly degenerate into a silly vice, but so can the quest for austere generalities which are so very general indeed that they are incapable of application to any particular.
Time makes fools of us all. Our only comfort is that greater shall come after us.
'Obvious' is the most dangerous word in mathematics.
It is the perennial youthfulness of mathematics itself which marks it off with a disconcerting immortality from the other sciences.
Fashion as King is sometimes a very stupid ruler.
I have always hated machinery, and the only machine I ever understood was a wheelbarrow, and that but imperfectly.
Euclid taught me that without assumptions there is no proof. Therefore, in any argument, examine the assumptions.
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