Augustin-Louis Cauchy

Mathematics French 1789 – 1857 546 quotes

Rigorized calculus and founded complex analysis

Most quoted

"I am a Christian, that is to say, I believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ, like Bossuet and Pascal, like Corneille and Racine, and like so many other great men who have been illustrious in the sciences and in letters. The more I study nature, the more I am amazed at the works of the Creator. The more I study mathematics, the more I admire the wisdom of God."

"The mean value theorem for derivatives states that if a function is continuous on a closed interval and differentiable on the open interval, then there exists at least one point in the open interval where the derivative of the function is equal to the average rate of change of the function over the interval."

— from Cours d'Analyse de l'École Royale Polytechnique, 1821

"A function is continuous if, for every value of the variable between given limits, the numerical value of the difference between two successive values of the function becomes indefinitely small with the numerical value of the difference between the corresponding values of the variable."

— from Cours d'Analyse, 1821

All quotes by Augustin-Louis Cauchy (546)

Philosophy: Truth's pursuit.

Essay 1840

Wisdom: Foundations firm.

Principle 1815

Art: Math's grace.

Reflection 1830

Letter: To colleague on proof.

Correspondence 1825

Life: Harmony in all.

Thought 1850

Witty: Convergence of ideas.

Remark 1845

Key: Mean value theorem.

Cours 1821

Politics: Science serves.

View 1830

Saying: Proof liberates.

Aphorism 1835

Speech: Math's future.

Address 1850

Field: Analysis depth.

Work 1821

Meaning: Eternal math.

Reflection 1855

Humor: Pi's endless dance.

Joke 1820

Science: Wave mechanics.

Mémoire 1827

Philosophy: Logic divine.

View 1830

Wisdom: Question deeply.

Advice 1840

Art: Equation's beauty.

Essay 1845

Excerpt: Faith's role.

Letter 1840

Life: Purpose found.

Note 1850

Comeback: Facts over words.

Reply 1830