MAT 300-01
Spring 2004
Paper Proposal: 250-400 words. Due no later than May 4, 2004.
Write a 250-400 word proposal for your final paper. Discuss what you plan to do in your final paper, and give a preliminary bibliography. You do not need to have read all of the references in the preliminary bibliography at the time that you submit this paper. Do not just hand in an outline. If this paper is not submitted before you turn in the final paper, you will be penalized a full letter grade on that paper.
Final paper. At least 1250 words. Diagrams and derivations do not directly count as words. Due May 13, 2004.
Write a report on one of the topics below. You should use at least five sources, including at least one primary source and at least one journal article related to your topic. The information from the primary source and the journal article should be integrated into the organization of the paper, not just added in to satisfy the requirements of the assignment. You may not use our text as one of your sources nor should you use web articles as sources for your paper unless you have my prior approval. If the paper involves things we have done in class, it should not just be a restatement of what we have done in class. The paper should follow the general outline that you established in your proposal. If you need to vary from that significantly, then discuss it with me first. Address the paper either to another student in the class or to another student at your own level of mathematical sophistication.
A. The historical development of any concept or field in mathematics, other than non-Euclidean geometry. The paper should concentrate on the period from 1400 C.E. to 1950 C.E., but you may discuss its origins in the classical and medieval periods and its further development after 1950.
B. The work of a mathematician from the period 1500 C.E. to 1950 C.E. If you choose someone that we have discussed in class, your report should not just duplicate that discussion. You should concentrate on the person's work, although some biographical material should be given. You should discuss the nature and unifying themes in the work; your paper should not be just a listing of his/her works. You should discuss how that person's work fit into the development of mathematics, what led up to it, and what later developed from it.
C. Any aspect of mathematics in America prior to 1950. This might be a specific mathematician or the specific development of some field in America. Another possibility might be the teaching of mathematics in America, but you should be sure that your paper is addressing mathematical issues, not just educational ones.
D. Any aspect of mathematics in a non-European country or region prior to 1950, except Egypt and Mesopotamia. This might be a specific mathematician or the specific development of some field. Since we will be discussing some aspects of Arab and Indian mathematics in class, you may only use one of these areas with special permission. Discuss with me what you want to do before proceeding too far.
E. Wild card topics. I am
willing to listen to any reasonable
proposal as long as the history of mathematics is involved, but I
reserve the right to reject any topic.
Discuss the development of one of the following areas/topics:
Mechanics from a mathematical point of view
Number theory from 1400 onward
Derivatives (Discuss with me first.)
Integration (Discuss with me first.)
Integration techniques
Series infinite series, power series
Analytic geometry (Discuss with me first.)
Projective geometry
Geometric perspective and its relation to art
Mathematical education
Abstract algebra groups, rings, fields
Logarithms
Statistics
Differential equations
Graph theory
Topology
Non-Euclidean geometry (Discuss with me first.)
Concept of a function
Geography and map projections
Mathematical logic
Calculating machines
Vector analysis (the history of vectors)
Matrices/linear algebra
Women in mathematics
African-Americans in mathematics (or any other significant minority)
Calculus texts
Mathematics texts
Art and mathematics
Francois Viete
Simon Stevin
John Napier
Johannes Kepler
Galileo Galilei
Girard Desargues
Rene Descartes (Discuss with me first.)
Pierre de Fermat (Discuss with me first.)
Blaise Pascal
Isaac Newton (Discuss with me first.)
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (Discuss with me first.)
Johann Bernoulli
Jakob Bernoulli
Leonhard Euler (Discuss with me first.)
Joseph Lagrange
Pierre Laplace
Adrien Legendre
Charles Babbage
Carl Friedrich Gauss (Discuss with me first.)
Augustin-Louis Cauchy
Evariste Galois
George Boole
Karl Weierstrass
George Bernhard Riemann
Georg Cantor
Henri Poincare
John von Neumann