The Cambridge Mathematical Journal and its descendants: the linchpin of a research community in the early and mid-Victorian age
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Publication:1765386
DOI10.1016/j.hm.2004.03.001zbMath1062.01011OpenAlexW2035130939MaRDI QIDQ1765386
Publication date: 23 February 2005
Published in: Historia Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hm.2004.03.001
19th centurymathematical journalsCambridge and Dublin Mathematical JournalCambridge Mathematical JournalpublishersQuarterly Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics
Related Items (6)
Launching mathematical research without a formal mandate: the role of university-affiliated journals in Britain, 1837--1870 ⋮ Robert Leslie Ellis's work on philosophy of science and the foundations of probability theory ⋮ The \textit{Mathematical Miscellany} and the \textit{Cambridge Miscellany of Mathematics}: closely connected attempts to introduce research-level mathematics in America, 1836--1843 ⋮ ``A valuable monument of mathematical genius: The Ladies' Diary(1704-1840) ⋮ British mathematics 1837–1901 ⋮ The British development of the theory of invariants (1841–1895)
Cites Work
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- William Wallace and the introduction of continental calculus to Britain: A letter to George Peacock
- The rise of Cayley's invariant theory (1841--1862)
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- From national to international society: The London Mathematical Society, 1867-1900
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- Geometry versus analysis in early 19th-century Scotland: John Leslie, William Wallace, and Thomas Carlyle
- Nineteenth-century mathematics in the mirror of its literature: A quantitative approach
- Calculus and analysis in early 19th-century Britain: The work of William Wallace
- Symbolical algebra as a foundation for calculus: D. F. Gregory's contribution
- From student club to national society: The founding of the London Mathematical Society in 1865
- 'A Corrective to the Spirit of too Exclusively Pure Mathematics': Robert Smith (1689-1768) and his Prizes at Cambridge University
- James Ivory's last papers on the ‘Figure of the Earth’ (with biographical additions)
- The first hundred years (1883–1983)
- 100 not out
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