WMY2000 NewsLetter 1
DECLARATION of RIO de JANEIRO on
MATHEMATICS
On May 6th, 1992, in Rio de Janeiro, during the
celebration of the 40th anniversary of the world-wide
reputed Institute of Pure and Applied Mathematics (IMPA),
Professor Jacques-Louis Lions, President of the
International Mathematical Union (IMU) declared in the
name of this Union, that the year 2000 will be the World
Mathematical Year.
WMY 2000 is set under the sponsorship of UNESCO
(Professor Federico Mayor), of the Third World Academy of
Sciences (Professor Abdus Salam and Professor Carlos
Chagas, who took part in the declaration of Rio de
Janeiro), of the French Ministry of Research and Space
(Professor Hubert Curien), of the Brazilean Academy of
Sciences (Professor Israel Vargas) and of the Swiss
Federal Counsellor (Dr.Flavio Cotti), the next
International Congress of Mathematicians being organized
in Zürich in August 1994.
The declaration of Rio de Janeiro sets three aims
:
1. First aim : the great challenges of
the 21st century
During his conference in Paris in 1900, David Hilbert
listed a series of the main problems that the now ending
century had to challenge.
The American Mathematical Society suggested in 1990,
at the last General Assembly of IMU in Kobe (Japan), that
first class mathematicians, to be represented within the
Turn of the Century Committee, organize the efforts to
envision what the great challenges of the year 2000
would be. This Committee is chaired by Professor Jacob
Palis Jr, IMPA (Brazil), Secretary of IMU.
2. Second aim : Mathematics, keys for
Development
Pure and Applied Mathematics are one of the main
keys of the understanding of the world and of its
development.
That is why it is essential that countries which
are members of UNESCO be gradually able to reach a
level enabling their admission to IMU, the members of
which are 50 nations for the time being. Therefore, the
second aim of the Declaration of Rio de Janeiro is that
most countries which are members of UNESCO reach such
level by the turn of century.
That implies great additional efforts in the fields
of Education, of Training, and-a very sensitive point
for countries that face difficulties in having currency
ressources-of access to Scientific Information.
Such efforts which have already been widely
undertaken, will be confirmed and raised by the two
main commissions of IMU : ICMI (International Commission
on Mathematical Instruction), which is chaired by
Professor M. de Guzman from Madrid and whose Secretary
is Professor M. Niss from Denmark, and the CDE
(Commission on Development and Exchange), which is
presided by Professor M.S. Narasimhan from Bombay and
whose Secretary is Professor P. Bérard from Grenoble,
France. Both commissions are linked with UNESCO which
was represented in Rio de Janeiro by Professor
A. Marzollo, responsible for mathematics.
3. Third aim : the Image of Mathematics
The Declaration of Rio de Janeiro sets as third
goal, which is also of great importance, a systematic
presence of mathematics in the ``Information Society"
thanks to examples and applications which will be
scientifically exact and open to the largest number.
That will be developed in connection with such
efforts which have been already undertaken by many
countries that are members of IMU. The declaration of Rio
de Janeiro on Mathematics announcing the World
Mathematical Year 2000 was warmly supported not only
by all the mathematicians present in Rio and who had come
from all continents, and of course many of the Brazilian
most eminent mathematicians, but also by professors in
other subjects too, and especially Professor Carlos
Chagas, former President of the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences.
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