August Ferdinand Möbius (1790-1868) - Mathematics and the Liberal Arts

August Ferdinand Möbius (1790-1868) - Mathematics and the Liberal Arts

To expand search, see Germany in the 1800s. Laterally related topic: Karl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855).

The Mathematics and the Liberal Arts pages are intended to be a resource for student research projects and for teachers interested in using the history of mathematics in their courses. Many pages focus on ethnomathematics and in the connections between mathematics and other disciplines. The notes in these pages are intended as much to evoke ideas as to indicate what the books and articles are about. They are not intended as reviews. However, some items have been reviewed in Mathematical Reviews, published by The American Mathematical Society. When the mathematical review (MR) number and reviewer are known to the author of these pages, they are given as part of the bibliographic citation. Subscribing institutions can access the more recent MR reviews online through MathSciNet.


Nagy, Dénes. Symmet-origami (symmetry and origami) in art, science, and technology. Symmetry Cult. Sci. 5 (1994), no. 1, 3--12. SC: 00A69 (01A99), MR: 1 309 239.

Discusses the history and philosophy of origami and then (in a little more depth) discusses some of its applications. The author discusses applications in math and science education, and also in art, design, and technology. A particularly interesting application of paper-folding and the theory of polyhedra is in music education, where one researcher devised "a 'tower' of five octahedra, to illustrate some basic concepts in musicology. His inspiration was from a work by Möbius written in 1861. Ganter's compound polyhedron illustrates geometrically the following concepts and their connections: the vertices correspond to the notes of the chromatic scale, the edges corresponds to the thirds and fifths, and the triangular faces correspond to the triads." He mentions that M. C. Escher was interesting in construction paper models (though it is not really clear how deep that interest lay). It is interesting that the well-known book by T. Sundara Row entitled Geometric Exercises in Paper Folding seems to be independent from the Japanese traditions. Closely related topics: Origami, Symmetry, Japan, Education, Music, and M. C. Escher.

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