• Sarve bhavantu sukhinah
    Sarve santu nira-maya-ah
    Sarve bhadrani pashyantu ma-kaschit dukha-bhak bhavet

    - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad: 1.4.14

  • “May all of mankind be happy May all be healthy
    May all experience prosperity
    May none (in the world) suffer.”

    - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad: 1.4.14

  • Asato Maa Sad Gamaya Tamaso Maa
    Jyotir Gamaya Mrityor Maa Amritam Gamaya

    - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad: 1.3.28

  • “O' Lord, please lead me from darkness of ignorance
    to the light (of knowledge) From death (limitation)
    to immortality (liberation).”

    - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad: 1.3.28

                                         

Florian Cajori (1859-1930)

Swiss-American Historian of Mathematics.

Florian Cajori immigrated to the United States at the age of sixteen. He received both his bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

 He taught for a few years at Tulane University, before being appointed as professor of applied mathematics there in 1887. He was then driven north by tuberculosis. He founded the Colorado College Scientific Society and taught at Colorado College where he held, at different times, the chair in physics, the chair in mathematics, and the position Dean of the engineering department. While in Colorado, he received his doctorate from Tulane in 1894. 

Cajori's A History of Mathematics (1894) was the first popular presentation of the history of mathematics in the United States. Based upon his reputation in the history of mathematics (even today his 1928–1929 History of Mathematical Notations has been described as "unsurpassed") he was appointed in 1918 to the first history of mathematics chair in the U.S, created especially for him, at the University of California, Berkeley. He remained in Berkeley, California until his death in 1930.

 Cajori did no original mathematical research unrelated to the history of mathematics. In addition to his numerous books, he also contributed highly recognized and popular historical articles to the American Mathematical Monthly. His last work was a revision of Andrew Motte's 1729 translation of Newton's Principia, vol.1 The Motion of Bodies, but he died before it was completed. The work was finished by R.T.Crawford of Berkeley, California. 

Societies and honors  

•(1917–1918) Mathematical Association of America president 

•(1923) American Association for the Advancement of Science vice-president 

•(1924–1925) History of Science Society vice-president 

•(1929–1930) Comité International d'Histoire des Sciences vice-president 

•The Cajori crater on the Moon was named in his honour 

Publications  

•1890: The Teaching and History of Mathematics in the United States U.S. Government Printing Office. 

•1893: A History of Mathematics, Macmillan & Company. 

•1898: A History of Elementary Mathematics, Macmillan. 

•1909: A History of the Logarithmic Slide Rule and Allied Instruments The Engineering News Publishing Company. 

•1916: William Oughtred: a Great Seventeenth-century Teacher of Mathematics The Open Court Publishing Company 

•1917: A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches: Including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories, The Macmillan Company. 

•1919: A History of the Conceptions of Limits and Fluxions in Great Britain, from Newton to Woodhouse, Open Court Publishing Company. 

•1920: On the History of Gunter's Scale and the Slide Rule during the Seventeenth Century Vol. 1, University of California Press. 

•1928: A History of Mathematical Notations The Open Court Company. 

•1934: Sir Isaac Newton's Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy and His System of the World tr. Andrew Motte, rev. Florian Cajori. Berkeley: University of California Press. 

Articles  

•1913: "History of the Exponential and Logarithmic Concepts", American Mathematical Monthly 20: 

•Page 5 From Napier to Leibniz and John Bernoulli I, 1614 — 1712 

•Page 35 The Modern Exponential Notation (continued) 

•Page 75 : The Creation of a Theory of Logarithms of Complex Numbers by Euler, 1747 — 1749 

•Page 107 : From Euler to Wessel and Argand, 1749 — 1800, Barren discussion. 

•Page 148: Generalizations and refinements effected during the nineteenth century : Graphic representation 

•Page 173: Generalizations and refinements effected during the nineteenth century  

•Page 205: Generalizations and refinements effected during the nineteenth century. These seven installments of the article are available through the Early Content program of Jstor. 

•1923: "The History of Notations of the Calculus." Annals of Mathematics, 2nd Ser., Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 1–46

Inventors of Algebra

Florian Cajori (1859 - 1930) Swiss-American historian of mathematics said: Indians were the “real inventors of Algebra.”  

Based upon his reputation in the history of mathematics even today his 1928–29 History of Mathematical Notations has been described as "unsurpassed." 

Societies and Honors: (1917–18) Mathematical Association of America president (1923) American Association for the Advancement of Science vice-president (1924–25) History of Science Society vice-president (1929–30) Comité International d'Histoire des Sciences vice-president the Cajori crater on the Moon was named in his honour. 

Notes and references: Cajori, Florian. "The History of Notations of the Calculus." Annals of Mathematics, 2nd Ser., Vol. 25, No. 1 (Sep., 1923)

MANUSCRIPT (MS Syriac [Paris], No. 346):

THAT our common numerals are of Hindu origin seems to be a well-established fact, and that Europe received them from the Arabs seems equally certain. |

Source: http://www.syriacstudies.com

Syrian scholar and Bishop Severus Sebokht (575 - 667) said: 

"I will omit all discussion of the science of the Hindus, a people not the same as the Syrians; 

their subtle discoveries in this science of astronomy, discoveries that are more ingenious than those 

of the Greeks and the Babylonians; their valuable methods of calculation; and their computing that surpasses description. 

I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs. If those who believe, 

because they speak Greek, that they have reached the limits of science should know these things they

 would be convinced that there are also others who know something." |

Florian Cajori (1859 - 1930) Swiss-American historian of mathematics said: Indians were the “real inventors of Algebra.”

Based upon his reputation in the history of mathematics even today his 1928–29 History of Mathematical Notations has been described as "unsurpassed."