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Early Writings on Graph Theory: Hamiltonian Circuits and The Icosian Game

from II - Historical Projects in Discrete Mathematics and Computer Science

Janet Heine Barnett
Affiliation:
Colorado State University – Pueblo
Brian Hopkins
Affiliation:
Saint Peter's College
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Summary

Introduction

Problems that are today considered to be part of modern graph theory originally appeared in a variety of different connections and contexts. Some of these original questions appear little more than games or puzzles. In the instance of the ‘Icosian Game’, this observation seems quite literally true. Yet for the game's inventor, the Icosian Game encapsulated deep mathematical ideas which we will explore in this project.

Sir William Rowan Hamilton (1805–1865) was a child prodigy with a gift for both languages and mathematics. His academic talents were fostered by his uncle James Hamilton, an Anglican clergyman with whom he lived from the age of 3. Under his uncle's tutelage, Hamilton mastered a large number of languages – including Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Persian, Arabic and Sanskrit – by the age of 10. His early interest in languages was soon eclipsed by his interests in mathematics and physics, spurred in part by his contact with an American calculating prodigy. Hamilton entered Trinity College in Dublin in 1823, and quickly distinguished himself. He was appointed Astronomer Royal of Ireland at the age of 22 based on his early work in optics and dynamics. Highly regarded not only by his nineteenth century colleagues, Hamilton is today recognized as a leading mathematician and physicist of the nineteenth century.

In mathematics, Hamilton is best remembered for his creation of a new algebraic system known as the ‘quaternions’ in 1843.

Type
Chapter
Information
Resources for Teaching Discrete Mathematics
Classroom Projects, History Modules, and Articles
, pp. 217 - 224
Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 2009

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