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Daily Inspiration Quote by George Boole

"No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful"

About this Quote

Boole is sneaking an aesthetic demand into what we like to imagine is math's cold, courtroom logic. He grants you "correct" as a baseline, then immediately treats it as insufficient: if a theorem only lands as accurate, you should suspect it still has rough edges, hidden assumptions, or a clumsy formulation waiting to be refined. Beauty becomes a diagnostic tool, not a decorative bonus.

The subtext is almost theological in its confidence that truth and elegance are entangled. In Boole's era, mathematics was rapidly professionalizing while also expanding into abstraction; his own work on logic and algebra helped lay tracks for what would later become computer science. In that context, "beauty" signals more than pretty symbols. It means compression, inevitability, and structural clarity: a proof that doesn't just convince, but feels like it couldn't have been otherwise. If it doesn't, Boole implies, you may be mistaking brute-force verification for understanding.

There's also a subtle rebuke here to the kind of correctness that survives by sheer technicality. Mathematicians know results can be true yet pedagogically opaque, patched together from lemmas that obscure the main idea. Boole is arguing that the craft of mathematics includes rewriting reality until it clicks - the moment when complexity collapses into a clean form and you realize the theorem isn't merely right, it's revealing. Beauty, in his hands, is the smell test for depth.

Quote Details

TopicReason & Logic
Source
Later attribution: Operator Theoretic Aspects of Ergodic Theory (Tanja Eisner, Bálint Farkas, Markus H..., 2015) modern compilationISBN: 9783319168982 · ID: ZWj_CgAAQBAJ
Text match: 98.97%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful. George Boole1 In Chapter 10 we showed ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Boole, George. (2026, March 4). No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-matter-how-correct-a-mathematical-theorem-may-123324/

Chicago Style
Boole, George. "No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful." FixQuotes. March 4, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-matter-how-correct-a-mathematical-theorem-may-123324/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"No matter how correct a mathematical theorem may appear to be, one ought never to be satisfied that there was not something imperfect about it until it also gives the impression of being beautiful." FixQuotes, 4 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-matter-how-correct-a-mathematical-theorem-may-123324/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

George Boole

George Boole (November 2, 1815 - December 8, 1864) was a Mathematician from Ireland.

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