The repercussion of José Anastácio da Cunha in Britain and USA in the nineteenth century
DOI10.1080/17498430.2013.802111zbMath1300.01017OpenAlexW2004604461WikidataQ55981752 ScholiaQ55981752MaRDI QIDQ5413564
Publication date: 30 April 2014
Published in: BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/26424
synthesisconvergenceinfinite seriesanalysispowersratioparallel postulateproportionCauchy criterionfluentfluxion
Biographies, obituaries, personalia, bibliographies (01A70) History of mathematics in the 18th century (01A50) History of mathematics in the 19th century (01A55) History of real functions (26-03) History of geometry (51-03) History of functions of a complex variable (30-03) History of sequences, series, summability (40-03)
Related Items
Cites Work
- José Anastácio da Cunha: a forgotten forerunner
- Anastácio da Cunha and the concept of convergent series
- William Ludlam: portrait of an eighteenth-century mathematician
- John Playfair on British decline in mathematics
- C. F. Gauss et J. A. da Cunha.
- Inspiration or desperation? Augustus De Morgan's appointment to the chair of mathematics at London University in 1828
- Analysis and synthesis in John Playfair's Elements of Geometry
- J. A. da Cunha et les fondements de l'analyse infinitésimale
- The obscurity of the equimultiples. Clavius' and Galileo's foundational studies of Euclid's theory of proportions
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