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Four- / other-dimensional |
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Geometers | ||||||||||
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Ageometer is a mathematician whose area of study is geometry.
Some notable geometers and their main fields of work, chronologically listed, are:
![]() Leonardo da Vinci |
![]() Johannes Kepler |
![]() Girard Desargues |
![]() René Descartes |
Blaise Pascal |
![]() Isaac Newton |
![]() Leonhard Euler |
![]() Carl Gauss |
![]() August Möbius |
![]() Nikolai Lobachevsky |
![]() John Playfair |
![]() Jakob Steiner |
![]() Julius Plücker |
![]() Arthur Cayley |
![]() Bernhard Riemann |
![]() Richard Dedekind |
Max Noether |
![]() Felix Klein |
![]() Hermann Minkowski |
![]() Henri Poincaré |
![]() Evgraf Fedorov |
H. S. M. Coxeter |
![]() Ernst Witt |
![]() Benoit Mandelbrot |
![]() Branko Grünbaum |
![]() Michael Atiyah |
![]() J. H. Conway |
![]() William Thurston |
![]() Mikhail Gromov |
![]() George W. Hart |
![]() Shing-Tung Yau |
![]() Károly Bezdek |
![]() Grigori Perelman |
![]() Denis Auroux |
![]() God as architect of the world, 1220–1230, from Bible moralisée |
![]() Kepler's Platonic solid model of planetary spacing in the Solar System from Mysterium Cosmographicum (1596) |
![]() The Ancient of Days, 1794, by William Blake, with the compass as a symbol for divine order |
![]() Newton (1795), by William Blake; here, Newton is depicted critically as a "divine geometer".[2] |