French logique and British logic: on the origins of Augustus De Morgan's early logical inquiries, 1805--1835.
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Publication:1415596
DOI10.1016/S0315-0860(03)00025-9zbMATH Open1113.01303OpenAlexW2096088207MaRDI QIDQ1415596FDOQ1415596
Publication date: 9 December 2003
Published in: Historia Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0315-0860(03)00025-9
Recommendations
History of mathematics in the 19th century (01A55) History of mathematical logic and foundations (03-03)
Cites Work
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Cited In (13)
- ‘Horrent with Mysterious Spiculæ’. Augustus De Morgan’s Logic Notation of 1850 as a ‘Calculus of Opposite Relations’
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- An introductory lecture delivered to the opening of the mathematical classes in the university of London nov. 5th, 1828
- Augustus De Morgan's inaugural lecture of 1828
- Schopenhauer and the Mathematical Intuition as the Foundation of Geometry
- Augustus De Morgan's Boolean Algebra
- De Morgan in the Prehistory of Statistical Hypothesis Testing
- The objective and the subjective in mid-nineteenth-century British probability theory
- British logic in the nineteenth century
- What Makes a Great Mathematics Teacher? The Case of Augustus De Morgan
- Thomas solly (1816–1875):an unknown pioneer of the mathematization of logic in england, 1839
- “In a rational world all radicals would be exterminated”: Mathematics, Logic and Secular Thinking in Augustus De Morgan's England
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