The following pages link to (Q3665036):
Displaying 50 items.
- Leonhard Euler's use and understanding of mathematical transcendence (Q452112) (← links)
- Leibniz's infinitesimals: their fictionality, their modern implementations, and their foes from Berkeley to Russell and beyond (Q486948) (← links)
- Platitudes in mathematics (Q514596) (← links)
- God, king, and geometry: revisiting the introduction to Cauchy's \textit{Cours d'analyse} (Q549913) (← links)
- Adolph Pavolovich Yushkevich on the occasion of his eightieth birthday (Q581384) (← links)
- One of Berkeley's arguments on compensating errors in the calculus (Q716158) (← links)
- Lagrange's theory of analytical functions and his ideal of purity of method (Q765964) (← links)
- Convergence and formal manipulation in the theory of series from 1730 to 1815 (Q885086) (← links)
- The problem of the definition area of a skew ruled surface: Peano and Lebesgue (Q1039934) (← links)
- The analytical society (1812-1813): Precursor of the renewal of Cambridge mathematics (Q1053016) (← links)
- J. L. Lagrange's changing approach to the foundations of the calculus of variations (Q1059621) (← links)
- Cauchy's conception of rigour in analysis (Q1079555) (← links)
- Infinitely small quantities in Cauchy's textbooks (Q1099149) (← links)
- Esprit de rigueur et présentation mathématique au XVIIIème siècle: Le cas d'une démonstration d'Aepinus. (The spirit of rigour and mathematical presentation in the 18th century: the case of a proof of Aepinus) (Q1100451) (← links)
- Definite values of infinite sums: Aspects of the foundations of infinitesimal analysis around 1820 (Q1203005) (← links)
- Historical evolution of the concept of homotopic paths (Q1205992) (← links)
- Algebraic analysis in Germany, 1780-1840: Some mathematical and philosophical issues (Q1309149) (← links)
- Frege and the rigorization of analysis (Q1325772) (← links)
- Pointwise and locally uniform convergence of series of holomorphic functions. II. (Q1325788) (← links)
- Functions, functional relations, and the laws of continuity in Euler (Q1578260) (← links)
- Geometry versus analysis in early 19th-century Scotland: John Leslie, William Wallace, and Thomas Carlyle (Q1578261) (← links)
- Weierstrass and approximation theory (Q1592394) (← links)
- Cauchy's infinitesimals, his sum theorem, and foundational paradigms (Q1616116) (← links)
- Tools, objects, and chimeras: Connes on the role of hyperreals in mathematics (Q1654210) (← links)
- Lagrange in the Netherlands: Dutch attempts to obtain rigor in calculus, 1797-1840 (Q1818239) (← links)
- Calculus and analysis in early 19th-century Britain: The work of William Wallace (Q1818240) (← links)
- Joseph Louis Lagrange's algebraic vision of the calculus (Q1821766) (← links)
- Abel and his mathematics in contexts. (Q1862651) (← links)
- Peano's axioms in their historical context (Q1899316) (← links)
- Which mathematical logic is the logic of mathematics? (Q1942095) (← links)
- Omnipresence, multipresence and ubiquity: kinds of generality in and around mathematics and logics (Q1942335) (← links)
- The notion of variable quantities \(\omega\) in Bolzano's early works (Q1986997) (← links)
- The intermediate value theorem and decision-making in psychology and economics: an expositional consolidation (Q2091707) (← links)
- Cauchy's work on integral geometry, centers of curvature, and other applications of infinitesimals (Q2188803) (← links)
- History of mathematics: a global cultural approach. Abstracts from the workshop held December 13--19, 2020 (online meeting) (Q2232324) (← links)
- Heritage and early history of the boundary element method (Q2269222) (← links)
- Hegel's analysis (Q2351943) (← links)
- A Burgessian critique of nominalistic tendencies in contemporary mathematics and its historiography (Q2391944) (← links)
- The foundational aspects of Gauss's work on the hypergeometric, factorial and digamma functions (Q2457841) (← links)
- Exceptions and counterexamples: understanding Abel's comment on Cauchy's theorem (Q2576314) (← links)
- Why Proof? A Historian’s Perspective (Q2915845) (← links)
- Louis Olivier: A Mathematician Only Known Through his Publications in Crelle's Journal During the 1820s (Q3422432) (← links)
- Mathematical roots of phenomenology: Husserl and the concept of number (Q3439854) (← links)
- Nonstandard Analysis, Infinitesimals, and the History of Calculus (Q3466723) (← links)
- Throwing Some Light on the Vast Darkness that is Analysis: Niels Henrik Abel's Critical Revision and the Concept of Absolute Convergence (Q3563630) (← links)
- Why should historical truth matter to mathematicians? Dispelling myths while promoting maths (Q3593588) (← links)
- Mathematical Rigor and the Origin of the Exhaustion Method (Q4345008) (← links)
- A Proof of Bonnet’s Version of the Mean Value Theorem by Methods of Cauchy (Q4575244) (← links)
- A Medida de Informação de Shannon: Entropia (Q5074105) (← links)
- Continuity between Cauchy and Bolzano: issues of antecedents and priority (Q5148919) (← links)