Site • RSS • Apple PodcastsDescription (podcaster-provided):
Cracking tales of historical mathematics and its interplay with science, philosophy, and culture. Revisionist history galore. Contrarian takes on received wisdom. Implications for teaching. Informed by current scholarship. By Dr Viktor Blåsjö.Themes and summary (AI-generated based on podcaster-provided show and episode descriptions):
➤ Revisionist history of mathematics and science • Greek geometry and Euclid: definitions, postulates, proofs, constructions, diagrams, oral tradition • Philosophy of geometry: Kant, rationalism/empiricism, innate space, non-Euclidean shifts • Heliocentrism, Islamic astronomy, relativity • Contrarian reassessments of Galileo and ArchimedesThis podcast examines the history of mathematics through a deliberately revisionist lens, using episodes that connect mathematical ideas to broader debates in science, philosophy, historiography, and culture. A recurring focus is Greek mathematics—especially Euclid, Archimedes, and the origins of proof—treated not just as a body of results but as a practice shaped by constructions, diagrams, oral teaching, and contested foundational concepts such as point, line, and straightness. The show often asks why classical geometry was done the way it was, what “good axioms” are, and how deductive structure and reduction relate to meaning and certainty in mathematics.
Across the episodes, mathematical developments are repeatedly set against philosophical frameworks, including rationalism versus empiricism, early modern attempts to emulate “geometrical method,” and Kantian accounts of how geometry can be both knowable a priori and applicable to the physical world. Later transformations—such as non-Euclidean geometry and operational definitions of space and time in relativity—are used to probe what, if anything, is innate or experiential in our understanding of space.
The podcast also revisits well-known historical narratives and priority claims in astronomy and physics, questioning standard hero stories and emphasizing the roles of predecessors, contemporaries, and transmission of ideas across cultures. Figures like Galileo, Copernicus, and Islamic astronomers appear as case studies in how scientific credit is assigned, how evidence and mathematics interact, and how historiographical assumptions can shape what later generations take to be “counterintuitive,” revolutionary, or original.