And Archimedes' math was technically more complex than anything else for at least a millennium and a half.
And I can't agree more with Sven:
Way too cool in any case. Truth unfolds in time through a communal process.
Apart from general physics, he was also an astronomer, and Cicero writes that the Roman consul Marcellus brought two devices back to Rome from the ransacked city of Syracuse. One device mapped the sky on a sphere and the other predicted the motions of the sun and the moon and the planets (i.e., an orrery). He credits Thales and Eudoxus for constructing these devices. For some time this was assumed to be a legend of doubtful nature, but the discovery of the Antikythera mechanism has changed the view of this issue, and it is indeed probable that Archimedes possessed and constructed such devices. Pappus of Alexandria writes that Archimedes had written a practical book on the construction of such spheres entitled On Sphere-Making.
8-p
In any field Benoît Mandelbrot should be a serious contender for the Archimedes Prize. He'll never win a Nobel Prize due the intense dislike he has generated among mathematicans.
Any of the above, but most interested in the first two. (Probably quite a few candidates for the last one!)
Fascinating. I only knew of Mandelbrot by name in relation to "Chaos", in particular, the book.
Would you really put him in the same category as Archimedes, Newton and Gauss? (My layperson's understanding of the conventional wisdom is that these are three giants of mathematics in history.) Truth unfolds in time through a communal process.