Mathematicians stand on each other's shoulders.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Mathematicians are always playing tricks on each other. They're always pulling jokes on each other.
Many mathematicians derive part of their self-esteem by feeling themselves the proud heirs of a long tradition of rational thinking; I am afraid they idealize their cultural ancestors.
Mathematicians are like managers - they want improvement without change.
Mathematicians are born, not made.
The greatest mathematicians, as Archimedes, Newton, and Gauss, always united theory and applications in equal measure.
Mathematics is written for mathematicians.
Mark all mathematical heads which be wholly and only bent on these sciences, how solitary they be themselves, how unfit to live with others, how unapt to serve the world.
We need scientists and mathematicians explaining why they are excited about their subjects but also why they are important for solving social problems, informing political debate and for the economy.
Even the greatest mathematicians, the ones that we would put into our mythology of great mathematicians, had to do a great deal of leg work in order to get to the solution in the end.
Mathematicians don't like it when they're associated with mental illness and sort of bristle when you say that they can't get along socially, that they're not good with people.