Mary Cartwright Influence On Algebra

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Dame Mary Cartwright was one of the founders of the Theory of Chaos and a pioneer when it comes to women in mathematics. Because of her personality, she was described as a modest and did not receive all of the credit she deserved for her major contributions in the Theory of Chaos, or even for Cartwright Theorem. The mathematician was greatly affected by the First and Second World War, both in her education and in the research she did later in her life.
The middle daughter of William Degby Cartwright and Lucy Harriette Maud Cartwright, Mary Cartwright was born in 17 of December 1900, in the city of Aynho, England. She had three brothers and a younger sister in a family that was well cultured and did not struggle financially. When Cartwright
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In the next year, Mary was nominated the Dame of the British Empire, an honour equivalent to knighthood in England. Also during this time, she became the first female mathematician to be a fellow of the English Royal Society. Dame Mary Lucy Cartwright died in Cambridge on April 3, 1998.
Cartwright can be considered very relevant in the mathematics, because of all the researches she did, and also because she acted in a scientific field that was only just beginning to accept women. The year she went to university was only the second year Oxford University was allowing women to receive a degree, meaning that there were fell women in University, especially taking a subject such as math.
She also faced great difficulties because of the First World War. During this period, because a great part of the working male population was send to fight for their countries, women began to take jobs and gain more independence. When the war ended, a lot of young men came to University to start or to being studying, resulting in an increased number of students per class. This condition made it almost impossible for Cartwright to watch classes from time to

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