Telling the Life of a Mathematician: The Case of J.J. Sylvester
Karen Hunger Parshall (1999)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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Karen Hunger Parshall (1999)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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L. Mordell (1971)
Acta Arithmetica
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Peter Dear (2001)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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This note suggests that a fruitful way of investigating the history of mathematics lies in consideration of its pedagogical purposes. As a general illustration of the directions that such an approach might take, the paper discusses early-modern arguments for the practical utility of mathematics and its capacity to inculcate good habits of thought, as well as the appearance of new uses for mathematical training in the later eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries that served the purpose...
Dhruv Raina (2003)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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The crystallization of scientific disciplines in late eighteenth-century Europe was accompanied by the proliferation of specialist histories of science. These histories were framed as much by the imperatives of the astronomy of the times as they were by the compulsions of disciplinary differentiation. This paper attempts to contextualise the engagement with the astronomy of India in the histories of astronomy authored in the eighteenth century by the astronomer Jean-Sylvain Bailly. While...
Ken Saito (1998)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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Igor F. Sharygin (2002)
The Teaching of Mathematics
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Nicolaas A. Rupke (1998-1999)
Philosophia Scientiae
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Danny J. Beckers (2000)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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The beginning of the 19th century witnessed the emergence of several new approaches to negative numbers. New notions of rigour made the 18th century conceptions of negative quantities unacceptable. This paper discusses theories of negative numbers emerging in the Netherlands in the early 19th century. Dutch mathematicians then opted for a different approach than that of their contemporaries, in Germany or France. The Dutch translation (1821) of Lacroix’s illustrates the ‘Dutch’ notion...
Brian, Eric (2008)
Journal Électronique d'Histoire des Probabilités et de la Statistique [electronic only]
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Ian Maclean (2005)
Revue d'histoire des mathématiques
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Thomas Harriot (1560?–1621) is known today as an innovative mathematician and a natural philosopher with wide intellectual horizons. This paper will look at his interest in combinations in three contexts: language (anagrams), natural philosophy (the question of atomism) and mathematics (number theory), in order to assess where to situate him in respect of three current historiographical debates: 1) whether there existed in the late Renaissance two opposed mentalities, the occult and...
Brendan Larvor (2005)
Philosophia Scientiae
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