The following pages link to Did Cauchy plagiarize Bolzano? (Q2555476):
Displaying 14 items.
- Who gave you the Cauchy-Weierstrass tale? The dual history of rigorous calculus (Q351452) (← links)
- Ten misconceptions from the history of analysis and their debunking (Q360440) (← links)
- God, king, and geometry: revisiting the introduction to Cauchy's \textit{Cours d'analyse} (Q549913) (← links)
- Mathematics as a quasi-empirical science (Q850486) (← links)
- In memoriam: Ivor Grattan-Guinness (June 23, 1941 -- December 12, 2014). (Q891752) (← links)
- Definite values of infinite sums: Aspects of the foundations of infinitesimal analysis around 1820 (Q1203005) (← links)
- Euler und das 'Cauchysche' Konvergenzkriterium (Q1229197) (← links)
- The mathematics of the past: distinguishing its history from our heritage (Q1877688) (← links)
- The notion of variable quantities \(\omega\) in Bolzano's early works (Q1986997) (← links)
- Controversies in the foundations of analysis: comments on Schubring's \textit{Conflicts} (Q2013410) (← links)
- In memoriam: Hans Freudenthal (1905--1990) (Q2048576) (← links)
- Cauchy's work on integral geometry, centers of curvature, and other applications of infinitesimals (Q2188803) (← links)
- A Burgessian critique of nominalistic tendencies in contemporary mathematics and its historiography (Q2391944) (← links)
- Continuity between Cauchy and Bolzano: issues of antecedents and priority (Q5148919) (← links)