I found it to be quite different from other math conferences I had attended in the past (AMATYC, CMC^3, NCTM, etc.). It was particularly hard to choose what sessions to go to, as there were 2805 of them to choose from over the course of four days! They are grouped by classification, and though other topics interested me as well, I stuck nearly exclusively with talks about the history of mathematics.
I did sit in on a few talks on general topics or recreational mathematics as well. (You can't beat it when Dr. Who shows up in a talk!)
Prior to attending this conference I joined a couple of other groups – the History of Mathematics Special Interest Group of the Mathematical Association of America (HOMSIGMAA) and the Association of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences (ACMS). Each held a reception and a special talk in the evening, and these are groups of folks I really wanted to make connections with. In joining HOMSIGMAA I was automatically part of the listserv, and I’ve gotten a great deal of valuable information there in preparation for my European travels. (This most recent is news of an exhibition in London on the life of John Dee that will be taking place while I am there – very exciting!)
I love the logo of the ACMS – an unfolded hypercube, which suggests (to me at least) Christ’s cross, higher dimensional reality, and mathematics - the language with which Galileo stated God has created the universe.
Another evening event was the Backgammon night hosted by Art Benjamin, at which I really came to have a deep appreciation for a game that I had known only at a very shallow level previously.
I had some time one afternoon to check out the city;so many things caught my eye, and the following pictures are the result. It's truly an interesting and beautiful city.
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