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         Bernoulli Johann:     more books (79)
  1. Johann Bernoulli's Reisen durch Brandenburg, Pommern, Preussen, Kurland, Russland und Polen in den Jahren 1777 und 1778. Band II. R?ckreise von Danzig ?ber Stettin nach Berlin im Jahre 1777, und zweite Reise nach Danzig im Jahr 1778 by Johann Bernoulli, 2010
  2. Johann Bernoullis Reisen durch Brandenburg, Pommern, Preussen, Kurland, Russland und Polen in den Jahren 1777 und 1778. Band VI. Rückreise von St. Petersburg über Mietau und Warschau nach Berlin by Johann Bernoulli, 1780-01-01
  3. Mathematiker (18. Jahrhundert): Leonhard Euler, Pierre-Simon Laplace, Daniel Bernoulli, Christian Goldbach, Johann Bernoulli, Edmond Halley (German Edition)
  4. 1748 Deaths: George Wade, William Kent, John Balguy, Johann Bernoulli, William Adam, Isaac Watts, Qamar-Ud-Din Khan, Asaf Jah I
  5. Swiss Calvinists: Henry Dunant, Daniel Bernoulli, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli, Karl Barth, Philip Schaff, Nicolaus Ii Bernoulli
  6. Leibnizens mathematische Schriften. Abteilung 1. Band IV. Briefwechsel zwischen Leibniz, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli und Nicolaus Bernoulli, Folge 3: Mathematik, Band 4 by Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, 2010
  7. Johann Bernoulli's Reisen durch Brandenburg, Pommern, Preussen, Kurland, Russland und Polen in den Jahren 1777 und 1778. Band IV. Aufenthalt zu St. Petersburg, nebst dem Verzeichnis der kaiserl. Gem?ldesammlung by Johann Bernoulli, 2010
  8. Johann Bernoulli's Reisen durch Brandenburg, Pommern, Preussen, Kurland, Russland und Polen in den Jahren 1777 und 1778. Band III. Reise von Danzig nach K?nigsberg, und von da nach Petersburg, im Jahr 1778 by Johann Bernoulli, 2010
  9. Johann Bernoulli's Reisen durch Brandenburg, Pommern, Preussen, Kurland, Russland und Polen in den Jahren 1777 und 1778. Band VI. R?ckreise von St. Petersburg ?ber Mietau und Warschau nach Berlin by Johann Bernoulli, 2010
  10. Johann Bernoulli: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  11. Leibnizens mathematische Schriften. Abteilung 1. Band III. Briefwechsel zwischen Leibniz, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli und Nicolaus Bernoulli, Folge 3: Mathematik, Band 3, Abt. 1 by Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, 1855-01-01
  12. 1654 Births: Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Friedrich, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, Joshua Barnes, Kangxi Emperor, Michiel de Swaen
  13. Leibnizens mathematische Schriften. Abteilung 1. Band IV. Briefwechsel zwischen Leibniz, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli und Nicolaus Bernoulli, Folge 3: Mathematik, Band 4 by Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, 1859-01-01
  14. Leibnizens mathematische Schriften. Abteilung 2. Band III. Briefwechsel zwischen Leibniz, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli und Nicolaus Bernoulli, Folge 3: Mathematik, Band 3, Abt. 2 by Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, 2010

21. Foreign Members (main_a00)
Translate this page Switzerland). 1725 bernoulli johann I (Switzerland). 1776 BernoulliJohann III (Germany). 1876 Berthelot Pierre-Eugene Marcellin (France).
http://hp.iitp.ru/eng/gallery/fma_ma00.htm
Foreign Members of the Academy
Abderhalden Emile (Switzerland) Abel Othenio (Austria) Adams John Bertram (Great Britain) Adams John Couch (Great Britain) Agassiz Jean-Louis-Roudolphe (USA) Ahlfors Lars Valerian (USA) Ahlwardt Wilhelm Theodor (Germany) Ahrens Heinrich Ludolf (Germany) Airy George Biddell (Great Britain) Akabori Shiro (Japan) Albinus Bernard Sifroy or Weiss Bernhard Siegfried (Netherlands) Alfven Hannes (Sweden) Amaldi Edoardo (Italy) Amari Michele (Italy) Ampere Andre-Marie (France) Ancel Marc (France) Anderson Philip Warren (USA) Anttila Inkeri Sylvi (Finland) Anville de Burguignon Jean-Baptiste (France) Appell Paul-Emile (France) Arago Dominique-Francois-Jean (France) Araujo de Azevedo Antonio da Barca, count (Portugal) Arbogast Louis-Francois-Antoine (France) Armstrong Henry Edward (Great Britain) Arrest Heinrich Ludwig von (Denmark) Arrhenius Svante August (Sweden) Arzruni Andreas (Germany) Asboth Oszkar (Austro-Hungary (Hungary)) Ascoli Graziadio Isaia (Italy) Aston Francis William (Great Britain) Atiyah Michael (Great Britain) Aubert Alexandre (Great Britain) Aubouin Jean (France) Aulard Francois-Alphonse (France) Auwers Arthur Julius Georg Friedrich von (Germany) Ayala Francisco Jose (USA) Babbage Charles (Great Britain) Bach Alexandre Dallas (USA) Bacq Zenon Marcel (Belgium) Baer Karl Maksimovich (Karl Ernst) von (Germany) Baeyer Johann Jacob (Germany) Baillaud Edouard Benjamin (France) Baillon Ernest-Henri (France)

22. Virtual Encyclopedia Of Mathematics
otto benedetti giovanni battista bergman stefan berkeley george bernays paul isaacbernoulli daniel bernoulli jacob (jacques) bernoulli johann bernoulli johann
http://www.lacim.uqam.ca/~plouffe/Simon/supermath.html
Super-Index of Biographies of Mathematicians
abel niels henrik abraham bar hiyya ha-nasi abraham max abu kamil shuja ibn aslam ibn muhammad ... zygmund antoni
This index was automatically generated using a new tagging program written by Simon Plouffe at LaCIM

23. 10.3. Bernoulli, Johan (1667-1748)
Pioneers in the field of calculus, appied the new tool to real problems, life was one of the most controversial of any mathematician, member of the world's most successful mathematical family, also known as Johannes, Jean or John.
http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/history/bernoull.html
10.3. Bernoulli, Johan (1667-1748)
IRA Johann Bernoulli was one of the pioneers in the field of calculus and helped apply the new tool to real problems. His life was one of the most controversial of any mathematician. He was a member of the world's most successful mathematical family, the Bernoullis. Johann (also known as Johannes, Jean or John, depending on the translation) Bernoulli was born in Basel, Switzerland, on August 6, 1667. His family had originally been from Antwerp, Belgium, but had fled to avoid persecution by Catholics. After first settling down in Frankfurt, Johann's grandfather moved to Basel in 1622. Johann was the tenth son of a successful merchant and local official. Originally, Johann's father had attempted to make a merchant out of his child but the son failed miserably as an apprentice. In 1683, he was given permission to enter the University of Basel, where his older brother Jacob, who was also a great mathematician, was already a professor. While pursuing a degree in medicine, Johann was tutored in mathematics by his older brother and soon developed a mastery of the new Leibnizian calculus. In 1694, he had committed himself to this new field and received his doctorate on a mathematical paper on muscular movement. Unable to get the seat of mathematics at University of Basel because his brother held it, Johann accepted a position at the University of Groningen. In 1705, he returned to Basel after his brother's death to take Jacob's old position at the university. During his life he was awarded many honors including membership at the Academies of Science at Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg and many others. He died in Basel on January 1, 1748.

24. Bernoulli, Johann [Jean]
Grandson of the first johann bernoulli was a minor mathematician and astronomer during the last days of the Enlightenment. johann(III) bernoulli. Born 4 Nov 1744 in Basel, Switzerland
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/bernouli_joh.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Bernoulli, Johann [Jean]
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Basel, Switzerland 6 Aug 1667 (ADB: 27 July)
Died: Basel, Switzerland 1 Jan 1748
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Drug Merchant
Clearly prosperous.
3. Nationality
Birth: Swiss
Career: Netherlands, Swiss
Death: Swiss
4. Education
Schooling: Basel, M.A. M.D.
1683, enrolled in U. of Basel.
1685, promoted to MA, began to study medicine;
Began to study math privately with brother Jakob I.
1690, licentiate in medicine.
Temporarily halted studies see support.
1694, doctoral dissertation in medicine (iatromathematics).
5. Religion
Affiliation: evangelical Protestanti.e, Lutheran
6. Scientific Disciplines
Primary: Mathematics, Mechanics
Subordinate: Medicine, Chemistry
(Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie also mentions minor chemistry).
7. Means of Support
Primary: Schoolmaster, Academic Position
Secondary: Personal Means
1691, spent most of year in Geneva teaching differential calculus to J. Christoph. Fatio-de- Duillier.

25. Bernoulli, Johann
bernoulli, johann (16671748). johann bernoulli was born in Switzerland and attended the University of Basel.
http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/thomas_awl/chapter1/medialib
Bernoulli, Johann (16671748) Johann Bernoulli was born in Switzerland and attended the University of Basel. His doctoral dissertation was in mathematics despite its medical title, which was used to hide his mathematical work from his father who wanted Johann to become a doctor. Bernoulli privately studied mathematics with his gifted brother Jakob , who served in the mathematics chair at the University of Basel. From that time on, both brothers were engrossed in infinitesimal mathematics and were the first to achieve a full understanding of Leibniz’s presentation of differential calculus. The Bernoulli brothers sometimes worked on the same problems, which was unfortunate in view of their jealous and touchy dispositions. In 1691 Bernoulli was in Paris where he presented and defended the new Leibniz calculus. During this period he also met L’Hosptial , then France’s most famous mathematician. L’Hospital engaged Bernoulli to instruct him in the new calculus. Johann was appointed professor of mathematics at the University of Groningen in Holland in 1695. L’Hospital had Bernoulli continue this instruction by correspondence after Bernoulli left for Holland and later moved back to Basel.

26. Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica. bernoulli, johann. Encyclopædia Britannica Article
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=80997

27. Bernoulli_Johann
johann bernoulli. Born 27 July 1667 johann bernoulli was the tenthchild of Nicolaus and Margaretha bernoulli. He was the brother
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Bernoulli_Johann.html
Johann Bernoulli
Born: 27 July 1667 in Basel, Switzerland
Died: 1 Jan 1748 in Basel, Switzerland
Click the picture above
to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Johann Bernoulli was the tenth child of Nicolaus and Margaretha Bernoulli. He was the brother of Jacob Bernoulli but Johann was twelve years younger than his brother Jacob which meant that Jacob was already a young man while Johann was still a child. The two brothers were to have an important influence on each others mathematical development and it was particularly true that in his early years Johann must have been greatly influenced by seeing Jacob head towards a mathematical career despite the objections of his parents. As to his education as a child, Johann wrote in his autobiography that his parents:- ... spared no trouble or expense to give me a proper education in both morals and religion. This religion was the Calvinist faith which had forced his grandparents to flee from Antwerp to avoid religious persecution. Nicolaus and Margaretha Bernoulli tried to set Johann on the road to a business career but, despite his father's strong pushing, Johann seemed to be totally unsuited to a future in business. Johann's father had intended him to take over the family spice business and in 1682, when he was 15 years old, Johann worked in the spice trade for a year but, not liking the work, he did not do well. It was with great reluctance that Johann's father agreed in 1683 to Johann entering the University of Basel. The subject that Johann Bernoulli was to study at university was medicine, a topic that many members of the Bernoulli family ended up studying despite their liking for mathematics and mathematical physics.

28. Bernoulli_Johann(III)
johann(III) bernoulli. Born 4 Nov 1744 in Basel, Switzerland Died 13 July 1807in Berlin, Germany. johann(III) bernoulli was a son of johann(II) bernoulli.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Bernoulli_Johann(III).ht
Johann(III) Bernoulli
Born: 4 Nov 1744 in Basel, Switzerland
Died: 13 July 1807 in Berlin, Germany
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Johann(III) Bernoulli was a son of Johann(II) Bernoulli . He was certainly considered a prodigy when a child with an encyclopedic knowledge and, like many other members of his extraordinarily talented family, he studied law and took an interest in mathematics. At the early age of fourteen he graduated with the degree of master of law. He was appointed to a chair at Berlin Academy at the age of only 19. Frederick II asked him to revive the astronomical observatory of the Academy but this was not a task for which Johann(III) was particularly well suited. His health had never been particularly good and his qualities as an astronomical observer were relatively poor. Johann(III) Bernoulli wrote a number of works on astronomy, reporting on astronomical observations and calculations, but these are of little importance. Strangely his most important contributions were the accounts of his travels in Germany which were to have a historical impact. In the field of mathematics he worked on probability , recurring decimals and the theory of equations. As in his astronomical work there was little of lasting importance. He did, however, publish the

29. Bernoulli, Jakob (1654-1705) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogra
Swiss mathematician (aka Jacque I or James I) brother of johann bernoulli. they are considered the most important founder of Calculus with the exception of Newton, the two had bitter arguments about the quality of each other's work.
http://www.treasure-troves.com/bios/BernoulliJakob.html

Branch of Science
Mathematicians Nationality Swiss ... Scientific Families
Bernoulli, Jakob (1654-1705)

Swiss mathematician (also known as Jacque I or James I) who was the brother of Johann Bernoulli . With his brother, he is considered the most important founder of calculus with the exception of Newton . Nonetheless, the two had bitter arguments about the quality of each other's work. In his Ars conjectandi (1713), which was published posthumously, he developed the properties of Bernoulli numbers It has still not been determined how Bernoulli was able to derive many of the properties of Bernoulli numbers he discovered (Smith 1994, p. 85). In a paper of sums, he remarks how useless Bullialdus's voluminous work Opus novum ad arithmeticum infinitorum (1682) was, which "did nothing more that compute with immense labor the sums of the first six powers, which is only a part of what we have accomplished in the space of a single page" (Smith 1994, p. 90). Ars conjectandi was also the first substantial treatise on probability It contained the general theory of permutation and combination the weak law of large numbers as well as the binomial theorem (for which the first adequate proof for positive integers was given) and multinomial theorem He solved the Bernoulli differential equation
y P x y Q x y n
independently of Leibniz and Johann Bernoulli . The lemniscate of Bernoulli, described by the polar equation

30. Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogr
bernoulli, johann (16671748), Swiss mathematician (also known as Jean I or JohnI) who was the father of Daniel bernoulli) and brother of Jakob bernoulli.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/BernoulliJohann.html

Branch of Science
Mathematicians Nationality Swiss ... Scientific Families
Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748)

Swiss mathematician (also known as Jean I or John I) who was the father of Daniel Bernoulli ) and brother of Jakob Bernoulli . With his brother Jakob , Johann Bernoulli is considered the most important founder of calculus (with the exception of Newton and Leibniz ). Nonetheless, Johann and Jakob two had bitter arguments about the quality of each other's work. Johann instructed l'Hospital , who later incorporated one of his Johann's results in a textbook he wrote, so that it has come to be known as l'Hospital's rule Johann filled the mathematics chair at Basel left vacant by his brother's death. He drove his son Daniel away from home after he won a prize of the Paris Academy of Sciences for which Johann had competed. Johann Bernoulli proposed the brachistochrone problem which asks what shape a wire must be for a bead to slide from one end to the other in the shortest possible time, as a challenge to other mathematicians in June 1696. For this, he is regarded as one of the founders of the calculus of variations The brachistochrone problem was solved by himself

31. Bernoulli, Jakob (1654-1705) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogra
bernoulli, Jakob (16541705), Swiss mathematician (also known as JacqueI or James I) who was the brother of johann bernoulli. With
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/BernoulliJakob.html

Branch of Science
Mathematicians Nationality Swiss ... Scientific Families
Bernoulli, Jakob (1654-1705)

Swiss mathematician (also known as Jacque I or James I) who was the brother of Johann Bernoulli . With his brother, he is considered the most important founder of calculus with the exception of Newton . Nonetheless, the two had bitter arguments about the quality of each other's work. In his Ars conjectandi (1713), which was published posthumously, he developed the properties of Bernoulli numbers It has still not been determined how Bernoulli was able to derive many of the properties of Bernoulli numbers he discovered (Smith 1994, p. 85). In a paper of sums, he remarks how useless Bullialdus's voluminous work Opus novum ad arithmeticum infinitorum (1682) was, which "did nothing more that compute with immense labor the sums of the first six powers, which is only a part of what we have accomplished in the space of a single page" (Smith 1994, p. 90). Ars conjectandi was also the first substantial treatise on probability It contained the general theory of permutation and combination the weak law of large numbers as well as the binomial theorem (for which the first adequate proof for positive integers was given) and multinomial theorem He solved the Bernoulli differential equation
y P x y Q x y n
independently of Leibniz and Johann Bernoulli . The lemniscate of Bernoulli, described by the polar equation

32. Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogr
Branch of Science " Mathematicians Nationality " Swiss Gender or Minority Status " Scientific Families bernoulli, johann (16671748) Swiss mathematician (also known as Jean I or John I) who was the father of Daniel bernoulli) and brother of Jakob
http://www.treasure-troves.com/bios/BernoulliJohann.html

Branch of Science
Mathematicians Nationality Swiss ... Scientific Families
Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748)

Swiss mathematician (also known as Jean I or John I) who was the father of Daniel Bernoulli ) and brother of Jakob Bernoulli . With his brother Jakob , Johann Bernoulli is considered the most important founder of calculus (with the exception of Newton and Leibniz ). Nonetheless, Johann and Jakob two had bitter arguments about the quality of each other's work. Johann instructed l'Hospital , who later incorporated one of his Johann's results in a textbook he wrote, so that it has come to be known as l'Hospital's rule Johann filled the mathematics chair at Basel left vacant by his brother's death. He drove his son Daniel away from home after he won a prize of the Paris Academy of Sciences for which Johann had competed. Johann Bernoulli proposed the brachistochrone problem which asks what shape a wire must be for a bead to slide from one end to the other in the shortest possible time, as a challenge to other mathematicians in June 1696. For this, he is regarded as one of the founders of the calculus of variations The brachistochrone problem was solved by himself

33. References For Bernoulli_Johann
References for the biography of johann bernoulli E J Aiton, The contributions of Isaac Newton, johann bernoulli and Jakob Hermann to the inverse problem of central
http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/References/Bernoulli_Johann.html
References for Johann Bernoulli
  • Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
  • Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. Books:
  • H Bernhard, The Bernoulli family, in H Wussing and W Arnold, Biographien bedeutender Mathematiker (Berlin, 1983).
  • J O Fleckenstein, Johann und Jacob Bernoulli (Basel, 1949).
  • V A Nikiforovskii, The great mathematicians Bernoulli (Russian), History of Science and Technology Nauka' (Moscow, 1984). Articles:
  • E J Aiton, The contributions of Isaac Newton, Johann Bernoulli and Jakob Hermann to the inverse problem of central forces, in (Wiesbaden, 1989), 48-58.
  • E Bachmann, Zum 200. Todestag des Mathematikers Johann Bernoulli, Schweiz. Z. Vermessg. Kulturtech.
  • H J M Bos, Johann Bernoulli on exponential curves, ca. 1695 : innovation and habituation in the transition from explicit constructions to implicit functions, Nieuw Arch. Wisk.
  • T Boswell, The brothers James and John Bernoulli on the parallelism between logic and algebra, Hist. Philos. Logic
  • A Dijksma, The Johann Bernoulli Foundation : a homage to Johann Bernoulli
  • 34. Biographies
    bernoulli, Daniel (17001782). bernoulli, Jakob (16541705). bernoulli, johann(16671748). Birkhoff, George David (18841944). Bolzano, Bernhard (17811848).
    http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/thomas_awl/chapter1/medialib
    Alphabetical Listing
    Biographies of over 100 people who have developed or used calculus or related mathematics: Abel, Niels Henrik (18021829) Agnesi, Maria Gaetana (17181799) Albert of Saxony (ca. 13161390) Alembert, Jean le Rond d' ... B.C.

    35. Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748)
    bernoulli, johann (16671748). Click here for pronunciation Fellman, EA JO Fleckenstein. bernoulli, johann (Jean) I. Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
    http://pirate.shu.edu/projects/reals/history/bernoull.html
    Bernoulli, Johann (1667-1748)
    Click here for pronunciation Johann Bernoulli was one of the pioneers in the field of calculus and helped apply the new tool to real problems. His life was one of the most controversial of any mathematician. He was a member of the world's most successful mathematical family, the Bernoullis. Johann (also known as Johannes, Jean or John, depending on the translation) Bernoulli was born in Basel, Switzerland, on August 6, 1667. His family had originally been from Antwerp, Belgium, but had fled to avoid persecution by Catholics. After first settling down in Frankfurt, Johann's grandfather moved to Basel in 1622. Johann was the tenth son of a successful merchant and local official. Originally, Johann's father had attempted to make a merchant out of his child but the son failed miserably as an apprentice. In 1683, he was given permission to enter the University of Basel, where his older brother Jacob, who was also a great mathematician, was already a professor. While pursuing a degree in medicine, Johann was tutored in mathematics by his older brother and soon developed a mastery of the new Leibnizian calculus. In 1694, he had committed himself to this new field and received his doctorate on a mathematical paper on muscular movement. Unable to get the seat of mathematics at University of Basel because his brother held it, Johann accepted a position at the University of Groningen. In 1705, he returned to Basel after his brother's death to take Jacob's old position at the university. During his life he was awarded many honors including membership at the Academies of Science at Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg and many others. He died in Basel on January 1, 1748.

    36. Bernoulli, Johann
    Translate this page 02/07/02 No 9. bernoulli, johann. 27.1.1667 Basel, 1.1.1748 Basel, ref.,von Basel. Sohn des Nicolaus, Kaufmanns, Grossrats und Gerichtsherrn
    http://www.snl.ch/dhs/externe/protect/textes/D19087.html
    Bernoulli, Jacob Bernoulli, Johann No 9
    Bernoulli, Johann
    27.1.1667 Basel, 1.1.1748 Basel, ref., von Basel. Sohn des Nicolaus, Kaufmanns, Grossrats und Gerichtsherrn, und der Margarethe Schönauer. Dorothea Falkner, von Basel. B. studierte in Basel Medizin (1685 Magister Artium, 1690 Lic. med., 1694 Dr. med.), wurde aber gleichzeitig von seinem älteren Bruder Jacob ( -> No 7 (vis viva) nahm B. Stellung gegen René Descartes und für die Leibnizsche Dynamik. Im Prioritätsstreit zwischen Newton und Leibniz ergriff B. entschieden die Partei des Letzteren. Durch seine Lehrtätigkeit - Schüler waren z.B. seine Söhne Daniel ( -> No 3 ), Johann ( -> No 10 ) und Nicolaus ( -> No 14 ), Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis, Alexis Claude Clairaut, Gabriel Cramer, v.a. aber Leonhard Euler -, durch seine Publikationen und durch seinen Briefwechsel (ca. 3'500 erhaltene Briefe) trug B. entscheidend zur Verbreitung der Infinitesimalmathematik in ihrer Leibnizschen Form in Europa bei.
    Werke
    Théorie de la manoeuvre des vaisseaux, 1714
    Opera omnia, 1742

    37. Bernoulli, Johann

    http://www.snl.ch/dhs/externe/protect/textes/D25846.html
    Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli, Johann No 10
    Bernoulli, Johann
    18.5.1710 Basel, 17.7.1790 Basel, ref., von Basel. Sohn des Johann ( -> No 9 1744 Susanna König. Privatunterricht v.a. durch den Vater. Ab 1724 Stud. der Jurisprudenz an der Univ. Basel (1729 lic. iur., 1732 Dr. iur.). Daneben Mathematikstud. beim Vater, 1732-33 beim Bruder Daniel ( -> No 3 ) in St. Petersburg, 1739 mit Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis in Cirey (F) bei Voltaire und der Marquise Emilie du Châtelet. 1743 Prof. für Eloquenz in Basel, 1748 Prof. für Mathematik in Basel als Nachfolger seines Vaters. 1746 Mitglied der Berliner Akad. der Wissenschaften. Vermittelte zahlreiche Schweizer Wissenschaftler nach Preussen. Mitglied der Pariser Akad. (1782). 1765/66 Rektor der Univ. Basel. Vier Preise der Pariser Akad. für Abhandlungen über die Lichtausbreitung (1736), Schiffsanker (1737), Ankerwinden (1741) und Magnete (1743). Sein Äthermodell zur Erklärung der Lichtausbreitung (1736) erinnert stark an dasjenige von James Clerk Maxwell (1861-62), doch verwarf er die Idee einer transversalen Wellenbewegung zugunsten einer longitudinalen. Ausgedehnte Korrespondenz, u.a. mit du Châtelet, Charles Marie de La Condamine, Maupertuis, Voltaire. Mitglied der Helvet. Gesellschaft.
    Literatur
    -Poggendorff

    38. BERNOULLI, Johann, Opera Omnia, Tam Antea Sparsim Edita, Quam Hactenus Inedita..
    The extraordinary solution of the problem of catenaria posed by Jakob Bernoulliwas johann's first independently published work, and placed him in the front
    http://www.polybiblio.com/watbooks/2127.html
    W. P. Watson Antiquarian Books
    BERNOULLI, Johann Opera Omnia, tam antea sparsim edita, quam hactenus inedita... Lausanne and Geneva, M.M. Bousquet, 1742 4 vols, 4to (245 x 190 mm), pp [iv] xxiv 563; [ii] 620; [ii] 563; [ii] [4, including initial blank] 5-588; with engraved portrait of the author, another engraved portrait of Frederick III of Prussia, engraved vignettes on titles, 91 folding engraved plates, and engraved and woodcut headpieces; a few gatherings lightly browned as usual, a very attractive copy in contemporary mottled calf, spines with gilt floral tools and red and green morocco labels, a little rubbed. £3250
    First edition, the collected writings, published and previously unpublished, of Johann Bernoulli (1667-1748), who along with his brother Jacob was a major figure in the development of mathematics, particularly calculus and probability theory, in the eighteenth century. 'Both brothers were engrossed in infinitesimal mathematics and were the first to achieve a full understanding of Leibniz' abbreviated presentation differential calculus. The extraordinary solution of the problem of catenaria posed by Jakob Bernoulli was Johann's first independently published work, and placed him in the front rank with Huygens, Leibniz, and Newton... After Newton's death in 1727, Bernoulli was unchallenged as the leading mathematical preceptor to all Europe' (DSB).
    His contributions to mathematics are so numerous and fundamental that there is no point in enumerating them here. DSB (II, pp. 51-55) gives a thorough survey.

    39. MICHELOTTI, Pietro Antonio., De Separatione Fluidorum In Corpore Animali Dissert
    Venice Pinelli, 1721. Bound with2 bernoulli, johann. De Motu Musculorum,De Effervescentia, Fermentatione Dissertationes PhysicoMechanicae.
    http://www.polybiblio.com/phillips/168.html
    Nigel Phillips
    MICHELOTTI, Pietro Antonio. Venice: Pinelli, 1721. 2 works in 1 volume, large 8vo, pp. (viii), 362, (1)errata, fine engraved frontispiece and 1 folding engraved plate; pp. (xxiv), 123, (1), 1 folding engraved plate. Some fine engraved and woodcut ornaments in both works. Contemporary paper boards, uncut. Boards somewhat soiled and stained, but internally an excellent copy. This item is listed on Bibliopoly by Nigel Phillips ; click here for further details.

    40. Bernoulli, Johann De Leonhard, Basel, Privathaushalt (1880-1895)
    Translate this page bernoulli, johann de Leonhard. Signatur. CH SWA HS 337. Titel. bernoulli, johannde Leonhard, Partikular. Laufzeit. 1880-1895. Umfang. 0.02 m (1 Bd).
    http://www.ub.unibas.ch/wwz/swa/204-049.htm
    Schweizerisches Wirtschaftsarchiv
    Bernoulli, Johann de Leonhard
    Signatur CH SWA HS 337 Titel Bernoulli, Johann de Leonhard, Partikular Laufzeit Umfang 0.02 m (1 Bd) Name(n) des Aktenbildners Typus Privatnachlass Zeitraum des Bestehens / Lebensdaten Ort Basel Kanton BS Branche Privathaushalt / Inhalt 1 Haushaltungsbuch Benutzungsbestimmungen keine Findmittel Zettelkatalog Bernoulli-Baer, Elisabeth (Mutter) (CH SWA HS 334)
    Bernoulli-Baer, Leonhard de Niklaus (Vater) (CH SWA HS 335)
    Bernoulli-von der Tann, Wilhelm de Leonhard (Bruder) (CH SWA HS 336)
    Bernoulli-Burckhardt, Niklaus de Johann (CH SWA HS 333)
    Bernoulli, Leonhard de Niklaus und Niklaus de Johann (CH SWA HS 338)
    Leonhard Bernoulli, Drogerie und Materialwaren (CH SWA HS 339)
    Goldene Apotheke, Dokumentensammlung SWA: H + I F 251 Bibliographische Hinweise Bemerkungen

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