Geometry versus analysis in early 19th-century Scotland: John Leslie, William Wallace, and Thomas Carlyle
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Publication:1578261
DOI10.1006/hmat.1999.2264zbMath0963.01009OpenAlexW2005966918MaRDI QIDQ1578261
Publication date: 25 June 2001
Published in: Historia Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1006/hmat.1999.2264
History of mathematics in the 19th century (01A55) History of mathematics at specific universities (01A73)
Related Items (10)
On two conjectures that shaped the historiography of indeterminate analysis: Strachey and Chasles on Sanskrit sources ⋮ William Wallace's chorograph (1839): a rare mathematical instrument ⋮ Polylogarithms, functional equations and more: the elusive essays of William Spence (1777-1815) ⋮ The logarithmic tables of Edward Sang and his daughters ⋮ A forgotten British analyst: Nicolas Vilant (1737-1807) ⋮ John Playfair on British decline in mathematics ⋮ A prosopographical analysis of the early American mathematics publication community ⋮ The Cambridge Mathematical Journal and its descendants: the linchpin of a research community in the early and mid-Victorian age ⋮ From Sylvia Plath'sThe bell jarto the Bad Sex Award: a partial account of the uses of mathematics in fiction ⋮ Some unknown documents associated with William Wallace (1768–1843)
Cites Work
- William Wallace and the introduction of continental calculus to Britain: A letter to George Peacock
- Convolutions in French mathematics, 1800-1840. Volume I: The settings. Volume II: The turns. Volume III: The data
- Geometry, analysis, and the baptism of slaves: John West in Scotland and Jamaica
- Calculus and analysis in early 19th-century Britain: The work of William Wallace
- Was Newton's Calculus a Dead End? The Continental Influence of Maclaurin's Treatise of Fluxions
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