Symbols and Things: Material Mathematics in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

In the steam-powered mechanical age of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the work of late Georgian and early Victorian mathematicians depended on far more than the properties of number. British mathematicians came to rely on industrialized paper and pen manufacture, railways and mail, and the print industries of the book, disciplinary journal, magazine, and newspaper. Though not always physically present with one another, the characters central to this book—from George Green to William Rowan Hamilton—relied heavily on communication technologies as they developed their theories in consort with colleagues. The letters they exchanged, together with the equations, diagrams, tables, or pictures that filled their manuscripts and publications, were all tangible traces of abstract ideas that extended mathematicians into their social and material environment. Each chapter of this book explores a thing, or assembling of things, mathematicians needed to do their work—whether a textbook, museum, journal, library, diagram, notebook, or letter—all characteristic of the mid-nineteenth-century British taskscape, but also representative of great change to a discipline brought about by an industrialized world in motion.

Author(s): Kevin Lambert
Series: Sci & Culture in the Nineteenth Century
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 328
City: Pittsburgh

Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Mathematical Work
Part I. Distributing
Chapter 1. Textbook in the Marketplace
Chapter 2. Fences, Diaries, and Mathematical Journals
Part II. Assembling
Chapter 3. Cambridge Museological Science and the Making of English Algebra
Chapter 4. The Mathematician’s Library: George Green, George Boole, and Augustus De Morgan
Part III. Practicing
Chapter 5. Romantic Space and Imaginary Numbers: Imagining Space through Diagrams
Chapter 6. William Thomson’s Notebooks
Chapter 7. Kites and Letters: The Peter Guthrie Tait and William Rowan Hamilton Correspondence
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index