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  1. Carl Gottlieb Ehler (8 September 1685 – 22 November 1753) is considered a mathematician, specifically due to his post as an astronomer in Berlin. He was mayor of the Prussian capital of Danzig from March 1741 until his death.

  2. Being a master of calculations, Euler at first did not recognize the problem of the bridges of Königsberg as a mathematical problem at all. When his friend Carl Gottlieb Ehler in a letter of 1736 asked Euler about a solution to the problem Euler answered:

  3. From Wikipedia \In mathematics, topology (from the Greek topos, 'place', and logos, 'study') is concerned with the properties of a geometric object that are preserved under continuous deformations, such as stretching, twisting, crumpling and bending, but not tearing or gluing." Geometry vs Topology.

  4. • 1736 Correspondences with Carl Gottlieb Ehler (1685-1753) • Ehlers Letter \You would render to me and our friend Kuhn a most valuable service, putting us greatly in your debt, most learned sir, if you would send us the solution, which you know well, to the problem of the seven K onigsberg bridges together with a proof.

  5. Nov 25, 2020 · Apparently, Euler was asked about the Königsberg bridge problem by Carl Gottlieb Ehler, an astronomer, mathematician, and later a mayor of Danzig. In his reply to Ehler in 1736 Euler dismissed the problem as not even mathematical:

  6. Carl Leonhard Gottlieb Ehler, mayor of Danzig, asked Euler for a solution to the problem of the seven bridges of Königsberg.

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  8. • 1736 Correspondences with Carl Gottlieb Ehler (1685-1753) • Ehlers Letter \You would render to me and our friend Kuhn a most valuable service, putting us greatly in your debt, most learned sir, if you would send us the solution, which you know well, to the problem of the seven K onigsberg bridges together with a proof.

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