Bonn Workshop 2007 |
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, the last polymath, is a natural inspiration for the Novembertagung – he stands for the combination of philosophy, history and mathematics like no one else. He had a great number of followers spreading his theories and he was truly a European, whose presence was appreciated from Paris over Berlin to St. Petersburg. Today, in the absence of contemporary polymaths, we expect our theme Mathematical practice and development throughout history, to render a fruitful combination of the multiple, highly specialized approaches that emerged in the history, philosophy and also the didactics of mathematics during the 20th century. The theme provides the opportunity of interaction between historians, philosophers, and researchers in the didactics of mathematics. It allows for a variety of conceptions of mathematics, and for a combination of different research methods used in history, philosophy and didactics. History, philosophy and didactics of mathematics are strongly interrelated.
In our days, on the one hand, mathematics is still widely regarded as the queen of sciences, seeming to bare eternal truths. On the other hand, the subject has lost its glamour and has more and more been inherited by the natural sciences as a tool. These extreme views seem to be strongly contradictory. Nevertheless, the wide range of topics and questions on the history, philosophy and didactics of mathematics may help to form the basis for putting the various faces of mathematics together to a rounded-up picture again. Since 1990, the Novembertagung offers young researchers from all over Europe a competent and creative forum for exchanging their results on the history, philosophy and didactics of mathematics, discuss work in progress, and thereby help bringing together these three bordering disciplines. |