The following pages link to (Q4699023):
Displayed 19 items.
- Algebraic collisions. Challenging Descartes with Cartesian tools (Q301103) (← links)
- John Wallis and the French: his quarrels with Fermat, Pascal, Dulaurens, and Descartes (Q452110) (← links)
- The arithmetics of Pierre Fermat in the context of the Mersenne correspondence: A microsocial approach (Q735087) (← links)
- Pierre Fermat: his private and professional life (Q735091) (← links)
- Unpublished manuscripts of Sophie Germain and a revaluation of her work on Fermat's last theorem (Q942899) (← links)
- Differentials and differential coefficients in the Eulerian foundations of the calculus. (Q1427537) (← links)
- François Viète's revolution in algebra (Q1643448) (← links)
- H.S.M. Coxeter's theory of accessibility: from Mario Pieri to Marvin Greenberg (Q2159722) (← links)
- Goldbach, Hurwitz, and the infinitude of primes: weaving a proof across the centuries (Q2249492) (← links)
- A Burgessian critique of nominalistic tendencies in contemporary mathematics and its historiography (Q2391944) (← links)
- Symbolism, combinations, and visual imagery in the mathematics of Thomas Harriot (Q2469953) (← links)
- Formulating figurate numbers (Q3391807) (← links)
- ‘Mathematics Made No Contribution to the Public Weal’: Why Jean Fernel (1497-1558) Became a Physician (Q4649680) (← links)
- A String of Pearls: Proofs of Fermat's Little Theorem (Q5195251) (← links)
- Alessandro Piccolomini and the certitude of mathematics (Q5308992) (← links)
- Sums of powers of integers – how Fermat may have found them (Q5369687) (← links)
- The Neil Bibby Lecture 2006: From Archimedes to limits: understanding real analysis (Q5491339) (← links)
- Perturbative light-matter interactions; from first principles to inverse design (Q6094623) (← links)
- Simson’s Reconstruction of Apollonius’ Loci Plani. Modern Ideas in Classical Language (Q6191793) (← links)