Mathematics in the metropolis: a survey of Victorian London (Q674568): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 12:11, 12 February 2024
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English | Mathematics in the metropolis: a survey of Victorian London |
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Mathematics in the metropolis: a survey of Victorian London (English)
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10 August 1997
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Divided into four sections: `Academic institutions', `Military mathematics', `Mathematics for women' and `Technical education', this paper examines the teaching of strictly university-level mathematics in a wide variety of teaching establishments in Victorian London. Stressing the prevalence of Cambridge-trained mathematicians, like A. De Morgan, and particularly the dominance of University College mathematics during the period 1837-1901, the author achieves much more beyond a fruitful comparison of teaching styles and courses. A. Rice has shown that a study of mathematics education at the university level `can shed some light on social developments in the capital, particularly with respect to women and the working class' (p. 412). Opening with a list of other aspects of London mathematics worthy of consideration besides university-level mathematics, the survey motivates further research in this multidimensional topic!
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teaching university-level mathematics
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social changes
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working class
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women
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