ℹ️ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 0.8 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/ |
| Last Crawled | 2026-03-29 21:18:11 (23 days ago) |
| First Indexed | 2025-04-18 00:16:32 (1 year ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | Euler’s Identity: the Most Beautiful Equation in Mathematics – ThatsMaths |
| Meta Description | A recent entry in the visitor’s book of the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove, Dublin perplexed the Friends of Joyce’s Tower, the volunteers who run the museum. The entry, reproduced as the boxed equation in the photograph, seemed as impenetrable as a passage of Finnegans Wake and quite beyond decryption. When invited to… |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | A recent entry in the visitor’s book of the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove, Dublin perplexed the Friends of Joyce’s Tower, the volunteers who run the museum. The entry, reproduced as the boxed equation in the photograph, seemed as impenetrable as a passage of Finnegans Wake and quite beyond decryption. When invited to elucidate its meaning, the visitor just chuckled. In fact, this equation, familiar to mathematicians and greatly admired for its elegance, is known as Euler’s Identity [
TM268
 or search for “thatsmaths” atÂ
irishtimes.com
].
Leonhard Euler
Born in Switzerland in 1707, mathematician Leonhard Euler spent most of his career in St Petersburg. His work is of singular genius, originality and profundity. His status as a mathematician compares to that of Shakespeare, Rembrandt and Bach in literature, painting and music. Mathematical writer William Dunham observed that if a Mount Rushmore of Maths were carved Euler would certainly feature there.
Euler’s Identity has been selected in several surveys as the most beautiful mathematical formula. It is not the appearance or typographical structure that is prized, but the concepts it embodies and the unexpected links it makes. To a mathematician, an equation is a work of art. Aspects of its beauty include simplicity, profundity, utility and the capacity to surprise, often revealing unanticipated connections between different areas of maths.
The identity unites the five most fundamental mathematical constants. On the right is zero, the origin of the number line and its additive identity: adding 0 to any number leaves it unchanged. Moving to the left, we find the number one, the multiplicative identity: multiplying any number by 1 leaves it unchanged.
The remaining term of the equation is Euler’s number,Â
e
, raised to the power ofÂ
i
 times Ď€ (pi). Euler’s number, the base of the natural logarithms, with a value of about 2.7, is ubiquitous in mathematics and statistics. You will recall from elementary geometry that pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (perhaps you remember the ratio 22/7 from school). Finally,Â
i
 is the square root of -1.
Into the Complex Plane
“Hold on”, you say, “any real number (plus or minus) multiplied by itself gives a positive result, so no real number can be the square root of -1” Correct! But the so-called real numbers fill only a single horizontal line in the complex plane, an infinite two-dimensional domain with a multitude of points that are not on the real line but that represent perfectly respectable numbers. They are called complex numbers not because they are complicated but because they require two quantities to specify them, a real part and an imaginary part, for example 4+3
i
. The simplest of these is the numberÂ
i
, which appears as the point one unit above 0 on the vertical line through the origin.
Euler’s identity is a special case of a foundational equation in complex analysis, Euler’s Formula, which he discovered in 1744. It shows how any complex number can be obtained by rotating a point on the real line around the origin. If the point at +
x
 is rotated through a half turn (pi radians in math-speak), it will land on –
x
. Euler’s formula is of enormous importance in physics and engineering, enabling us to solve otherwise intractable problems. Nobel laureate Richard Feynman called it “the most remarkable formula in mathematics”.
Why did the visitor write Euler’s identity, and what links it to James Joyce? As Winston Churchill once remarked, that is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma!
Published
April 17, 2025
April 18, 2025
Post navigation |
| Markdown | [Skip to content](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/#content)
[](https://thatsmaths.com/) [](https://thatsmaths.com/)
[ThatsMaths](https://thatsmaths.com/)
Follow on twitter: @thatsmaths
# Euler’s Identity: the Most Beautiful Equation in Mathematics
[thatsmaths](https://thatsmaths.com/author/thatsmaths/) [Occasional](https://thatsmaths.com/category/occasional/)
April 17, 2025
April 18, 2025
[](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/applemark/)
A recent entry in the visitor’s book of the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove, Dublin perplexed the Friends of Joyce’s Tower, the volunteers who run the museum. The entry, reproduced as the boxed equation in the photograph, seemed as impenetrable as a passage of Finnegans Wake and quite beyond decryption. When invited to elucidate its meaning, the visitor just chuckled. In fact, this equation, familiar to mathematicians and greatly admired for its elegance, is known as Euler’s Identity \[[TM268](https://www.irishtimes.com/science/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-james-joyce-and-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/) or search for “thatsmaths” at [irishtimes.com](http://irishtimes.com/)\].
**Leonhard Euler**
Born in Switzerland in 1707, mathematician Leonhard Euler spent most of his career in St Petersburg. His work is of singular genius, originality and profundity. His status as a mathematician compares to that of Shakespeare, Rembrandt and Bach in literature, painting and music. Mathematical writer William Dunham observed that if a Mount Rushmore of Maths were carved Euler would certainly feature there.
[](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/euler-identity-eqn/)
Euler’s Identity has been selected in several surveys as the most beautiful mathematical formula. It is not the appearance or typographical structure that is prized, but the concepts it embodies and the unexpected links it makes. To a mathematician, an equation is a work of art. Aspects of its beauty include simplicity, profundity, utility and the capacity to surprise, often revealing unanticipated connections between different areas of maths.
The identity unites the five most fundamental mathematical constants. On the right is zero, the origin of the number line and its additive identity: adding 0 to any number leaves it unchanged. Moving to the left, we find the number one, the multiplicative identity: multiplying any number by 1 leaves it unchanged.
The remaining term of the equation is Euler’s number, *e*, raised to the power of *i* times π (pi). Euler’s number, the base of the natural logarithms, with a value of about 2.7, is ubiquitous in mathematics and statistics. You will recall from elementary geometry that pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (perhaps you remember the ratio 22/7 from school). Finally, *i* is the square root of -1.
**Into the Complex Plane**
“Hold on”, you say, “any real number (plus or minus) multiplied by itself gives a positive result, so no real number can be the square root of -1” Correct! But the so-called real numbers fill only a single horizontal line in the complex plane, an infinite two-dimensional domain with a multitude of points that are not on the real line but that represent perfectly respectable numbers. They are called complex numbers not because they are complicated but because they require two quantities to specify them, a real part and an imaginary part, for example 4+3*i*. The simplest of these is the number *i*, which appears as the point one unit above 0 on the vertical line through the origin.
[](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/screenshot-53/)
Euler’s identity is a special case of a foundational equation in complex analysis, Euler’s Formula, which he discovered in 1744. It shows how any complex number can be obtained by rotating a point on the real line around the origin. If the point at +*x* is rotated through a half turn (pi radians in math-speak), it will land on –*x*. Euler’s formula is of enormous importance in physics and engineering, enabling us to solve otherwise intractable problems. Nobel laureate Richard Feynman called it “the most remarkable formula in mathematics”.
Why did the visitor write Euler’s identity, and what links it to James Joyce? As Winston Churchill once remarked, that is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma\!
- [Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/?share=facebook&nb=1)
- [Share on X (Opens in new window) X](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/?share=twitter&nb=1)
- [Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/?share=linkedin&nb=1)
- [Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/?share=tumblr&nb=1)
- [Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email](mailto:?subject=%5BShared%20Post%5D%20Euler%27s%20Identity%3A%20the%20Most%20Beautiful%20Equation%20in%C2%A0Mathematics&body=https%3A%2F%2Fthatsmaths.com%2F2025%2F04%2F17%2Feulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics%2F&share=email&nb=1)
- [Print (Opens in new window) Print](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/#print?share=print&nb=1)
### *Related*
- Tagged
- [Euler](https://thatsmaths.com/tag/euler/)

## Published by thatsmaths
[View all posts by thatsmaths](https://thatsmaths.com/author/thatsmaths/)
**Published**
April 17, 2025
April 18, 2025
## Post navigation
[Previous Post The Emergence of Spring](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/03/20/the-emergence-of-spring/)
[Next Post The James Webb Telescope: Viewing the Universe from Lagrange Point L2](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/05/15/the-james-webb-telescope-viewing-the-universe-from-lagrange-point-l2/)
- [About](https://thatsmaths.com/about/)
- [Contact](https://thatsmaths.com/contact/)
- [Contents](https://thatsmaths.com/contents/)
- [Links](https://thatsmaths.com/links/)
- [In Reckoning Easter, the disciples of Patrick were ahead of Rome](https://thatsmaths.com/2026/03/19/in-reckoning-easter-the-disciples-of-patrick-were-ahead-of-rome/)
- [From perches to petaflops: the evolution of rational measurement](https://thatsmaths.com/2026/02/19/from-perches-to-petaflops-the-evolution-of-rational-measurement/)
- [The Shape and Size of the Universe: Curvature is Key](https://thatsmaths.com/2026/01/15/the-shape-and-size-of-the-universe-curvature-is-key/)
- [Who Invented the Digital Computer? There’s No Simple Answer.](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/12/18/who-invented-the-digital-computer-theres-no-simple-answer/)
- [The Hindu-Arabic Numerals: a Blessing for Modern Civilisation](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/11/20/the-hindu-arabic-numerals-a-blessing-for-modern-civilisation/)
[Tweets by thatsmaths](https://twitter.com/thatsmaths?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)
[Blog at WordPress.com.](https://wordpress.com/?ref=footer_blog)
- [Subscribe](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
[Subscribed](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
- [ ThatsMaths](https://thatsmaths.com/)
- Already have a WordPress.com account? [Log in now.](https://wordpress.com/log-in?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fr-login.wordpress.com%2Fremote-login.php%3Faction%3Dlink%26back%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fthatsmaths.com%252F2025%252F04%252F17%252Feulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics%252F)
- [Privacy](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
- - [ ThatsMaths](https://thatsmaths.com/)
- [Subscribe](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
[Subscribed](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
- [Sign up](https://wordpress.com/start/)
- [Log in](https://wordpress.com/log-in?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fr-login.wordpress.com%2Fremote-login.php%3Faction%3Dlink%26back%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fthatsmaths.com%252F2025%252F04%252F17%252Feulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics%252F)
- [Copy shortlink](https://wp.me/p28DOu-3C5)
- [Report this content](https://wordpress.com/abuse/?report_url=https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
- [View post in Reader](https://wordpress.com/reader/blogs/31612342/posts/13893)
- [Manage subscriptions](https://subscribe.wordpress.com/)
- [Collapse this bar](https://thatsmaths.com/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/)
##
##
Loading Comments...
###
 |
| Readable Markdown | [](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/applemark/)
A recent entry in the visitor’s book of the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove, Dublin perplexed the Friends of Joyce’s Tower, the volunteers who run the museum. The entry, reproduced as the boxed equation in the photograph, seemed as impenetrable as a passage of Finnegans Wake and quite beyond decryption. When invited to elucidate its meaning, the visitor just chuckled. In fact, this equation, familiar to mathematicians and greatly admired for its elegance, is known as Euler’s Identity \[[TM268](https://www.irishtimes.com/science/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-james-joyce-and-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/) or search for “thatsmaths” at [irishtimes.com](http://irishtimes.com/)\].
**Leonhard Euler**
Born in Switzerland in 1707, mathematician Leonhard Euler spent most of his career in St Petersburg. His work is of singular genius, originality and profundity. His status as a mathematician compares to that of Shakespeare, Rembrandt and Bach in literature, painting and music. Mathematical writer William Dunham observed that if a Mount Rushmore of Maths were carved Euler would certainly feature there.
[](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/euler-identity-eqn/)
Euler’s Identity has been selected in several surveys as the most beautiful mathematical formula. It is not the appearance or typographical structure that is prized, but the concepts it embodies and the unexpected links it makes. To a mathematician, an equation is a work of art. Aspects of its beauty include simplicity, profundity, utility and the capacity to surprise, often revealing unanticipated connections between different areas of maths.
The identity unites the five most fundamental mathematical constants. On the right is zero, the origin of the number line and its additive identity: adding 0 to any number leaves it unchanged. Moving to the left, we find the number one, the multiplicative identity: multiplying any number by 1 leaves it unchanged.
The remaining term of the equation is Euler’s number, *e*, raised to the power of *i* times π (pi). Euler’s number, the base of the natural logarithms, with a value of about 2.7, is ubiquitous in mathematics and statistics. You will recall from elementary geometry that pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (perhaps you remember the ratio 22/7 from school). Finally, *i* is the square root of -1.
**Into the Complex Plane**
“Hold on”, you say, “any real number (plus or minus) multiplied by itself gives a positive result, so no real number can be the square root of -1” Correct! But the so-called real numbers fill only a single horizontal line in the complex plane, an infinite two-dimensional domain with a multitude of points that are not on the real line but that represent perfectly respectable numbers. They are called complex numbers not because they are complicated but because they require two quantities to specify them, a real part and an imaginary part, for example 4+3*i*. The simplest of these is the number *i*, which appears as the point one unit above 0 on the vertical line through the origin.
[](https://thatsmaths.com/the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/screenshot-53/)
Euler’s identity is a special case of a foundational equation in complex analysis, Euler’s Formula, which he discovered in 1744. It shows how any complex number can be obtained by rotating a point on the real line around the origin. If the point at +*x* is rotated through a half turn (pi radians in math-speak), it will land on –*x*. Euler’s formula is of enormous importance in physics and engineering, enabling us to solve otherwise intractable problems. Nobel laureate Richard Feynman called it “the most remarkable formula in mathematics”.
Why did the visitor write Euler’s identity, and what links it to James Joyce? As Winston Churchill once remarked, that is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma\!
**Published** April 17, 2025April 18, 2025
## Post navigation |
| Shard | 6 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 13899039203176140006 |
| Unparsed URL | com,thatsmaths!/2025/04/17/eulers-identity-the-most-beautiful-equation-in-mathematics/ s443 |