kainzero wrote:
dizmox wrote:
One year on I retract what I said now. But it is kind of true that there hardly seem to be any famous Japanese mathematicians pre 1900.
isn't pre-1900 the isolationist days? (at least pre-meiji, pre-black ships.)
my japanese history is weak but i thought before meiji, japan was largely seen as technologically behind. this makes their rise to militant empire and subsequent war recovery efforts really impressive as far as industrialization, etc.
Well, yeah. I guess the academic culture wasn't there then, and the most famous mathematicians tend to be from those days when there were more low hanging fruits to put one's name on.
But as an outsider who consumes and uses the occasional applied result, how are Japanese universities in pure (rather than applied) math?
Probability is a strong area. I think there's a lot of good algebraic stuff going on too.
Last edited by dizmox (2012 May 02, 11:28 am)