Thomas L. Bartlow, Villanova University

Philadelphia Area Seminar on the History of Mathematics (PASHoM)

Friday, December 12, 2008, 1:00 am EST

Time: 6:00 p.m.

Place: Villanova University


Edward V. Huntington is best known as a prototypical American postulate theorist and as the mathematician behind the method of apportioning Representatives among the states. However, much of his teaching was in the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard and, in 1907, he became chairman of the Committee on the Teaching of Mathematics to Students of Engineering, a joint committee of the AMS and the AAAS. This led him to become involved in the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education and to write several papers on mathematics and mechanics in the training of engineers.