The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss' complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss' complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss's extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss's complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss' complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss's complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss' complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse as number theory, probability and astronomy were already widely acknowledged during his lifetime. But it took another three generations of mathematicians to reveal the true extent of his output as they studied Gauss' extensive unpublished papers and his voluminous correspondence. This posthumous twelve-volume collection of Gauss' complete works, published between 1863 and 1933, marks the culmination of their efforts and provides a fascinating...
The genius of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777 1855) and the novelty of his work (published in Latin, German, and occasionally French) in areas as diverse a...
The French mathematician and engineer Gerard Desargues (1591 1661) was one of the founders of projective geometry. Desargues' theorem is named in the honour of this prolific writer of treatises on geometry and its application to the arts and architecture. His important writings, which had been lost, were published in 1864 by the mathematician and scientific historian Noel-Germinal Poudra (1794 1894). Poudra's two-volume edition, republished here, reveals the major role played by Desargues in the scientific debates of the seventeenth century. It includes a biography of Desargues, in which...
The French mathematician and engineer Gerard Desargues (1591 1661) was one of the founders of projective geometry. Desargues' theorem is named in the ...
The French mathematician and engineer Gerard Desargues (1591 1661) was one of the founders of projective geometry. Desargues' theorem is named in the honour of this prolific writer of treatises on geometry and its application to the arts and architecture. His important writings, which had been lost, were published in 1864 by the mathematician and scientific historian Noel-Germinal Poudra (1794 1894). Poudra's two-volume edition, republished here, reveals the major role played by Desargues in the scientific debates of the seventeenth century. It includes a biography of Desargues, in which...
The French mathematician and engineer Gerard Desargues (1591 1661) was one of the founders of projective geometry. Desargues' theorem is named in the ...
The great nineteenth-century mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet (1805 59) studied in Paris, coming under the influence of scholars including Fourier and Legendre. He then taught at Berlin and Gottingen universities, where he was the successor to Gauss and mentor to Riemann and Dedekind. His achievements include the first satisfactory proof of the convergence of Fourier series under appropriate conditions, and the theorem on primes in arithmetic progression which was, at the same time, the foundation of analytic number theory and one of its greatest achievements. He also did...
The great nineteenth-century mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet (1805 59) studied in Paris, coming under the influence of scholars including...