Created
February 24, 2014 03:45
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Grassman on "ars longa, vita brevis"
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For I have every confidence that the effort I have applied to the science | |
reported upon here, which has occupied a considerable span of my lifetime and | |
demanded the most intense exertions of my powers, is not to be lost. ... a time | |
will come when it will be drawn forth from the dust of oblivion and the ideas | |
laid down here will bear fruit. ... some day these ideas, even if in an altered | |
form, will reappear and with the passage of time will participate in a lively | |
intellectual exchange. For truth is eternal, it is divine; and no phase in the | |
development of truth, however small the domain it embraces, can pass away | |
without a trace. It remains even if the garments in which feeble men clothe it | |
fall into dust. | |
Hermann Grassmann, in the foreword to the Ausdehnungslehre of 1862, | |
translated by Lloyd Kannenberg. | |
(found via "The Grassmann Algebra Book") |
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