Incomprehensible oblivion on the Peano's legacy

Szymon Dolecki; Gabriele H. Greco

Antiquitates Mathematicae (2012)

  • Volume: 6
  • ISSN: 1898-5203

Abstract

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Giuseppe Peano (27.10.1858-20.04.1932) made ​​many discoveries and introduced many concepts that are attributed to other mathematicians, even though their contribution was late and often less significant. Our main goal is to guide those of his achievements, which are the least known and an indication of the value of others that seem to be under-appreciated. We will also on the causes of the incomprehensible oblivion. Peano began studying mathematics at the University of Turin in 1876, and graduated in 1880 with high honors (pieni voti assoluti) For a year he was an assistant of Enrico D’Ovidio(11.10.1842–21.03.1933), then became an assistant of Engelo Gennocchi (5.03.1817–7.03.1889). Due to health problems of Gennocchi, who already had 64 years, Peano took over shortly lecture from his master calculus.

How to cite

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Szymon Dolecki, and Gabriele H. Greco. "Incomprehensible oblivion on the Peano's legacy." Antiquitates Mathematicae 6 (2012): null. <http://eudml.org/doc/293093>.

@article{SzymonDolecki2012,
abstract = {Giuseppe Peano (27.10.1858-20.04.1932) made ​​many discoveries and introduced many concepts that are attributed to other mathematicians, even though their contribution was late and often less significant. Our main goal is to guide those of his achievements, which are the least known and an indication of the value of others that seem to be under-appreciated. We will also on the causes of the incomprehensible oblivion. Peano began studying mathematics at the University of Turin in 1876, and graduated in 1880 with high honors (pieni voti assoluti) For a year he was an assistant of Enrico D’Ovidio(11.10.1842–21.03.1933), then became an assistant of Engelo Gennocchi (5.03.1817–7.03.1889). Due to health problems of Gennocchi, who already had 64 years, Peano took over shortly lecture from his master calculus.},
author = {Szymon Dolecki, Gabriele H. Greco},
journal = {Antiquitates Mathematicae},
keywords = {},
language = {eng},
pages = {null},
title = {Incomprehensible oblivion on the Peano's legacy},
url = {http://eudml.org/doc/293093},
volume = {6},
year = {2012},
}

TY - JOUR
AU - Szymon Dolecki
AU - Gabriele H. Greco
TI - Incomprehensible oblivion on the Peano's legacy
JO - Antiquitates Mathematicae
PY - 2012
VL - 6
SP - null
AB - Giuseppe Peano (27.10.1858-20.04.1932) made ​​many discoveries and introduced many concepts that are attributed to other mathematicians, even though their contribution was late and often less significant. Our main goal is to guide those of his achievements, which are the least known and an indication of the value of others that seem to be under-appreciated. We will also on the causes of the incomprehensible oblivion. Peano began studying mathematics at the University of Turin in 1876, and graduated in 1880 with high honors (pieni voti assoluti) For a year he was an assistant of Enrico D’Ovidio(11.10.1842–21.03.1933), then became an assistant of Engelo Gennocchi (5.03.1817–7.03.1889). Due to health problems of Gennocchi, who already had 64 years, Peano took over shortly lecture from his master calculus.
LA - eng
KW -
UR - http://eudml.org/doc/293093
ER -

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