(April 15, 1707 – September 18, 1783)

If the issue concerns mathematics look no farther than Leonhard Euler. With nearly 1000 first class publications to his name, this ultra-ingenious polymath is the greatest of all mathematicians. He was relentlessly prolific. His phenomenal brain-power enabled him to calculate as easily as folks breathe. This explains why he is deemed the preeminent algorist and was nicknamed “Analysis Incarnate”. Euler excelled in all branches of mathematics, uncovered links between those branches, laid modern foundations, standardized notations, proved theorems, transcended every benchmark and pioneered new methodologies. During his 76 years lifetime 1 out of every 3 math-publications in the world was by him. Altogether, Euler effectuated the most scientific disquisitions ever. His fellow universal geniuses appraised him above others. Johann Bernoulli tabbed him “Beyond comparison”. Pierre-Simon Laplace proclaimed him “The master of all mathematicians”. Carl Friedrich Gauss called Leonhard Euler’s legacy “Irreplaceable best school”; whereas, Henri Poincaré titled Euler “Mathematics’ highest sovereign”. Stupendously brilliant, versatile and productive, he was the supreme sage whose sagacities transmogrified all sciences. Not even his blindness in 1766 could hinder him. At Saint Petersburg Academy interlocutors marveled in disbelief — as he mentally conjured mind-blowing disquisitions: for his secretaries to compile for publishing. No comparable novelties have ever been witnessed. The sheer quantity and quality of his works is breathtaking. Nobody else came close. Not Gauss! Not Newton! No one at all! The greatest, the most inspiring, and the most amazing theorems have Euler’s palmprints all over them. He was (and still remains) the mathematical champion of all the champions.

 

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52 Comments

  1. Hi, I love this website and the wonderful work you put into it. So many great stuffs here. Special thanks for this one about Leonhard Euler. I agree with Pierre-Simon Laplace. Euler is the master of all mathematicians.

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    Any help would be really appreciated!

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  5. You came up with a great list of mathematicians! I’m currently conducting my own survey on Facebook and it will be interesting to compare my results to yours. However, I’m not really happy with your list of the 100 greatest scientists of all time. Why isn’t Darwin on your list? In my opinion, he should certainly be in the top 5!

    • Hello David Terr,
      Let me remind you that this work took over 15 years.
      My four evaluative criteria are: overall Ability, Versatility, Productivity and Developmental Influences.
      Despite Charles Darwin’s historical importance, his achievements fell short under these ranking criteria.
      Thank you.

  6. You should take part in a contest for one of the best blogs on the web. I will recommend this site!

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