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Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) was a British mathematician, philosopher, and social critic. He pioneered the study of analytic philosophy, and wrote extensively on logic as the basis for mathematics and linguistics. He won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1950.
He came up with the pythagorean theorem
I Don't Know. Have a nice day.
his theory for right angled triangles
Some famous logicians include Aristotle, Bertrand Russell, Gottlob Frege, and Kurt Gödel.
Bertrand Russel revolutionized mathematics and applied uses of math with deductive reasoning. His views on analytical philosophy were not widely embraced when he first published them but they became the cornerstone of how calculus and statistics are used today.
Some people say he was but in real he was he was completely in the fever of Atheism and to understand this u should treat his books, " Why i am not Christian "
Ralph Schoenman is an American left-wing activist who gained some notoriety in the 1960s while acting as the personal secretary of Bertrand Russell, the left-wing philosopher. He also was the acting secretary and chief fundraiser for the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation. Before his death at 97 in 1969, Bertrand Russell severed all relations with Schoenman and had him removed as secretary of the foundation that bore his name. Schoenman has most recently hosted a radio program with his wife Mya Shone called Taking Aim.
Some of the lasting contributions of ancient Egyptian civilization cover areas such as mathematics, engineering and medicine.
Analytic philosophy of mind traces its origins to the early 20th century with key contributors like Bertrand Russell, G.E. Moore, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. The focus of this field is on understanding mental phenomena through logical analysis and language. The development of this branch of philosophy has been influenced by advancements in psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience.
Google: Peano, Fibonacci edit: The above are contributors, not contributions so it does not answer the question. Italian geometry of about a century ago was the start of what is considered "modern geometry." Italy is still a strong contributor to geometry as well as to practically all fields of mathematics.
The most prominent such mathematicians are Bertrand Russell, a prominent philosopher as well as a logician, who was awarded the 1950 Nobel in Literature and John Nash who was awarded the 1994 Nobel in Economics for his study of equilibria in non-zero sum games.Moreover, (from Wikipedia): There is no Nobel Prize in Mathematics, which has led to considerable speculation about why Alfred Nobel omitted it.[32][33] Some recipients of the Nobel Prize in other fields also have notable achievements in or have made outstanding contributions to mathematics; for example, Bertrand Russell was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature (1950) and Max Born and Walther Bothe shared the Nobel Prize in Physics (1954). Some others with advanced credentials in mathematics and/or who are known primarily as mathematicians have been awarded the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel: Kenneth Arrow (1972), Leonid Kantorovich (1975), John Forbes Nash (1994), Clive W. J. Granger (2003), Robert J. Aumann (who shared the 2005 Prize with Thomas C. Schelling), and Roger Myerson and Eric Maskin (2007).