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A mathematician is a person whose area of study and research is mathematics. In the United States, most mathematicians are employed by private firms in various capacities. Others may be employed as professors at universities, by research institutions, or by various military or civilian government agencies. [1]
While some people believe mathematics is fully understood (as it is often presented this way in elementary textbooks), in fact, there is ongoing research into many areas of mathematics. In fact, the publication of new discoveries in mathematics continues at an immense rate in hundreds of scientific journals, many of them devoted to mathematics and many devoted to subjects to which mathematics is applied (such as theoretical computer science and theoretical physics).
Unlike the other sciences, research in mathematics generally does not consist of performing experiments. Rather, mathematics is about problem-solving, where truths are deduced from other known truths. Computer experiments and other numerical evidence might be a part of this process, but in the end, mathematics research is about constructing proofs of theorems.
In particular, calculation is not a big part of mathematics research, and mathematicians need not have any extraordinary ability in adding or multiplying numbers. See mental calculators to read about prodigies at performing such calculations.
Mathematicians are typically interested in finding and describing patterns that may have originally arisen from problems of calculation, but have now been abstracted to become problems of their own. Problems have come from physics, economics, games, generalizations of earlier mathematics, and some problems are simply created for the challenge of solving them. Although much mathematics is not immediately useful, history has shown the eventually applications are found. For example, number theory originally seemed to be without purpose, but after the invention of computers it gained countless applications to algorithms and cryptography.
Mathematicians differ from philosophers in that the primary questions of mathematics are assumed (for the most part) to transcend the context of the human mind; the idea that "2+2=4 is a true statement" is assumed to exist without requiring a human mind to state the problem. Not all mathematicians would strictly agree with the above; the philosophy of mathematics contains several viewpoints on this question.
Mathematicians differ from physical scientists such as physicists or engineers in that they do not typically perform experiments to confirm or deny their conclusions; and whereas every scientific theory is always assumed to be an approximation of truth, mathematical statements are an attempt at capturing truth. If a certain statement is believed to be true by mathematicians (typically as special cases are confirmed to some degree) but has neither been proven nor disproven to logically follow from some set of assumptions, it is called a conjecture, as opposed to the ultimate goal, a theorem that is proven true. Unlike physical theories, which may be expected to change whenever new information about our physical world is discovered, mathematical theories are static. Once a statement is considered a theorem, it remains true forever.
As is the case in many scientific disciplines, the field of mathematics has been disproportionately dominated by men. Among the minority of prominent female mathematicians are Emmy Noether (1882 - 1935), Sophie Germain (1776 - 1831), Sofia Kovalevskaya (1850 - 1891), Rózsa Péter (1905 - 1977), Julia Robinson (1919 - 1985), Mary Ellen Rudin, Eva Tardos, Émilie du Châtelet, Mary Cartwright and Marianna Csörnyei.
The following are quotes about mathematicians, or by mathematicians.
(Actually "mathematicians" in this context refers to astrologers.)
Several old jokes common amongst the scientific disciplines illustrate the difference between the mathematical mind and that of other disciplines. One goes as follows:
Another joke goes thus:
And another:
And finally: