Africa: Africa and Mathematics

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Emeagwali won the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize, which has been called “supercomputing’s Nobel Prize,” for inventing a formula that allows computers to perform their fastest computations - a discovery that inspired the reinvention of supercomputers. He was extolled by then U.S. President Bill Clinton as “one of the great minds of the Information Age” and described by CNN as “a Father of the Internet;” and is the most searched-for scientist on the Internet.


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Isaac Asimov, the most prolific science writer, acknowledges that mathematics, science and technology are the gift of ancient Africans to our modern world.


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The first draft of a portrait that depicted Emeagwali as a supercomputer wizard driving a carriage powered by thousands of chickens (a metaphor for his 65,000 weak processors that performed the world’s fastest computation). The “Negro Emeagwali” (shown in this illustration) was rejected and replaced with a “Caucasian Emeagwali” (shown below).


A “whitened” Caucasian portrait of Emeagwali was acceptable and widely published. One illustrator argued that Emeagwali has a trace of Caucasian blood and said that he could see the “Caucasian look” in his face.


Jefferson wrote in his book “Notes on Virginia” that Africans are intellectually inferior and cannot understand mathematics.


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This false portrait of Euclid as a white male reinforced Jefferson’s views that mathematics could only be comprehended by whites. Since there is no proof that Euclid ever travelled outside Africa it makes sense to assume that he is full-blooded Negro.


(www.emeagwali.com)

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