French logique and British logic: on the origins of Augustus De Morgan's early logical inquiries, 1805--1835.
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- An Athenaeum Curiosity: De Morgan's Reviews of Boole and Jevons
- Arthur Cayley as Sadleirian professor: A glimpse of mathematics teaching at 19th-century Cambridge
- Augustus De Morgan's Algebraic Work: The Three Stages
- Augustus De Morgan, the History of Mathematics, and the Foundations of Algebra
- Charles Babbage as an algorithmic thinker
- Condorcet et Sylvestre-François Lacroix
- De Morgan and the Laws of Algebra
- Early criticism of the symbolical approach to algebra
- Euler's Letters to a Princess of Germany as an expression of his mature scientific outlook
- From student club to national society: The founding of the London Mathematical Society in 1865
- Genèse de l'Algèbre symbolique en Angleterre : une influence possible de John Locke
- George Peacock and the British origins of symbolical algebra
- Influences on Boole's logic: The controversy between William Hamilton and Augustus De Morgan
- Inspiration or desperation? Augustus De Morgan's appointment to the chair of mathematics at London University in 1828
- Internalism, externalism, and beyond: 19th-century British algebra
- James Ivory, F.R.S., mathematician: ‘The most unlucky person that ever existed’
- L'enseignement des mathématiques par la « méthode révolutionnaire ». Les leçons de Laplace à l'Ecole normale de l'an III.
- Logic versus algebra: English debates and Boole's mediation
- Memory, Efficiency, and Symbolic Analysis: Charles Babbage, John Herschel, and the Industrial Mind
- On the dynamics of mathematical change in the case of Monge and the French revolution
- Quelques aspects de l'histoire des équations fonctionnelles liées à l'évolution du concept de fonction. (Some aspects of the history of functional equations combined with the development of the of concept function)
- Rigor and clarity: foundations of mathematics in France and England, 1800--1840
- Symbolical algebra as a foundation for calculus: D. F. Gregory's contribution
- The Development of Logic as Reflected in the Fate of the Syllogism 1600–1900
- The analytical society (1812-1813): Precursor of the renewal of Cambridge mathematics
- The art and the science of British algebra: a study in the perception of mathematical truth
- The calculus as algebraic analysis: Some observations on mathematical analysis in the 18th century
- The calculus of operations and the rise of abstract algebra
- The logic of impossible quantities
- The making of Peacock's \textit{Treatise on algebra}: A case of creative indecision
- The mathematical background of George Boole's \textit{Mathematical analysis of logic} (1847)
- Thomas solly (1816–1875):an unknown pioneer of the mathematization of logic in england, 1839
- What Makes a Great Mathematics Teacher? The Case of Augustus De Morgan
- William Wallace and the introduction of continental calculus to Britain: A letter to George Peacock
- Woodhouse, Babbage, Peacock, and modern algebra
- ‘The emergency which has arrived’: the problematic history of nineteenth-century British algebra – a programmatic outline
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Cited in
(21)- 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
- Augustus De Morgan: his life and work
- Schopenhauer and the mathematical intuition as the foundation of geometry
- Thomas solly (1816–1875):an unknown pioneer of the mathematization of logic in england, 1839
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 761112 (Why is no real title available?)
- British logic in the nineteenth century
- Augustus De Morgan's unpublished octagon of opposition
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2152633 (Why is no real title available?)
- On the syllogism and other logical writings
- ``This compendious language: mathematics in the world of Augustus De Morgan
- What Makes a Great Mathematics Teacher? The Case of Augustus De Morgan
- Robert Leslie Ellis, William Whewell and Kant: the role of Rev H F C Logan
- The theory of relations in Augustus De Morgan
- “In a rational world all radicals would be exterminated”: Mathematics, Logic and Secular Thinking in Augustus De Morgan's England
- Augustus De Morgan's Boolean Algebra
- De Morgan in the Prehistory of Statistical Hypothesis Testing
- `Horrent with mysterious spiculæ'. Augustus De Morgan's logic notation of 1850 as a `calculus of opposite relations'
- Augustus De Morgan's anonymous reviews for The Athenæum: a mirror of a Victorian mathematician
- De Morgan's series test
- The objective and the subjective in mid-nineteenth-century British probability theory
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