Pure mathematics, may it never be of any use to anyone. Henry John Stephen Smith More Quotes by Henry John Stephen Smith More Quotes From Henry John Stephen Smith If we except the great name of Newton (and the exception is one that the great Gauss himself would have been delighted to make) it is probable that no mathematician of any age or country has ever surpassed Gauss in the combination of an abundant fertility of invention with an absolute vigorousness in demonstration. Henry John Stephen Smith age names country It is the peculiar beauty of this method, gentlemen, and one which endears it to the really scientific mind, that under no circumstance can it be of the smallest possible utility. Henry John Stephen Smith math beauty science For each successive class of phenomena, a new calculus or a new geometry, as the case might be, which might prove not wholly inadequate to the subtlety of nature. Henry John Stephen Smith cases class might Poor teaching leads to the inevitable idea that the subject (mathematics) is only adapted to peculiar minds, when it is the one universal science and the one whose four ground-rules are taught us almost in infancy and reappear in the motions to the universe. Henry John Stephen Smith taught-us teaching school