Pages that link to "Item:Q3193028"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to Is mathematical history written by the victors? (Q3193028):
Displaying 18 items.
- Small oscillations of the pendulum, Euler's method, and adequality (Q341234) (← links)
- Nonstandard analysis: its creator and place (Q383351) (← links)
- Is Leibnizian calculus embeddable in first order logic? (Q1616106) (← links)
- Toward a history of mathematics focused on procedures (Q1616107) (← links)
- Cauchy's infinitesimals, his sum theorem, and foundational paradigms (Q1616116) (← links)
- Fermat's dilemma: Why did he keep mum on infinitesimals? and the European theological context (Q1616127) (← links)
- The Mathematical Intelligencer flunks the Olympics (Q1655498) (← links)
- Proofs and retributions, or: why Sarah can't take limits (Q2013325) (← links)
- Controversies in the foundations of analysis: comments on Schubring's \textit{Conflicts} (Q2013410) (← links)
- Leibniz's syncategorematic infinitesimals. II: Their existence, their use and their role in the justification of the differential calculus (Q2201990) (← links)
- Toward a clarity of the extreme value theorem (Q2254563) (← links)
- Bolzano's infinite quantities (Q2289681) (← links)
- Periodic words connected with the tribonacci-Lucas numbers (Q2414402) (← links)
- Nonstandard Analysis, Infinitesimals, and the History of Calculus (Q3466723) (← links)
- Bolzano’s measurable numbers: are they real? (Q4562869) (← links)
- A Precise and Reliable Multivariable Chain Rule (Q5162645) (← links)
- 19th-century real analysis, forward and backward (Q6164797) (← links)
- On the unviability of interpreting Leibniz's infinitesimals through non-standard analysis (Q6492113) (← links)