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         Cardano Girolamo:     more books (93)
  1. The Book of My Life (New York Review Books Classics) by Girolamo Cardano, 2002-10-31
  2. Cardano, the gambling scholar by Oystein Ore, 1965
  3. Vita Di Girolamo Cardano, Milanese Filosofo Medico E Letterato Celebratissimo (Italian Edition) by Girolamo Cardano, 2010-03-15
  4. The Life Of Girolamo Cardano, Of Milan, Physician V1 by Henry Morley, 2007-07-25
  5. Cardano's Cosmos: The Worlds and Works of a Renaissance Astrologer by Anthony Grafton, 2001-11-15
  6. Renaissance Curiosa: John Dee's Conversations With Angels, Girolamo Cardano's Horoscope of Christ , Johannes Trithemius and Cryptography, George Dal (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies) by Wayne Shumaker, 1983-09
  7. Girolamo Cardano: Le opere, le fonti, la vita (Filosofia e scienza nel Cinquecento e nel Seicento. Studi) (Italian Edition)
  8. Jerome Cardan. the Life of Girolamo Cardano, of Milan, Physician (Volume 2) by Henry Morley, 2010-01-04
  9. Girolamo Cardano 1501-1576: Physician, Natural Philosopher, Mathematician, Astrologer, and Interpreter of Dreams by Markus Fierz, 1983-02
  10. The Life Of Girolamo Cardano Of Milan, Physician V2 by Henry Morley, 2007-07-25
  11. Jerome Cardan V2: The Life Of Girolamo Cardano Of Milan, Physician by Henry Morley, 2007-07-25
  12. Girolamo Cardano: Philosoph, Naturforscher, Arzt (Wolfenbutteler Abhandlungen zur Renaissanceforschung) (German Edition)
  13. La Mente Di Girolamo Cardano (Italian Edition) by Enrico Rivari, 2010-01-10
  14. Jerome Cardan: The Life of Girolamo Cardano, of Milan, Physician by Henry Morley, 2010-04-21

1. Girolamo Cardano
Hvem var Girolamo cardano girolamo Cardano havde et rigt liv, hvilket kan ses i hans bibliografi, De vita propria liber (The Book of My Life).
http://hp6.edu.cbs.dk/bentzen/courses/ha/history/cardano.htm
Hvem var Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano havde et rigt liv, hvilket kan ses i hans bibliografi, De vita propria liber (The Book of My Life) . I bibliografien fortæller Cardano hvor han blev født, og hvorledes han i 1520 indskrives ved universitetet i Pavia, Italien. Universitetsstudierne afsluttes i 1526, med en doktorgrad i medicin, hvorefter Cardano påbegyndte en medicins praksis i Padua (Saccolongo). Practica arithmetica (Practisk matematik) Artis magnae sive de regulis algebraicis liber unus. Referencer Cardano, Girolamo. The Book of My Life . trans. Jean Stoner. Toronto: J. M. Dent and Sons, Ltd., 1931.
Fierz, Markus. Girolamo Cardano (1501-1576): Philosopher, Natural Philosopher, Mathematician, Astrologer, and Interpreter of Dreams . trans. Helga Niman. Boston: Birkhauser, 1983.
Ore, Oystein. Cardano: The Gambling Scholar . Princeton: University Press, 1956.

2. Cardano Girolamo
Translate this page cardano girolamo CARDANO (1501-1576). Girolano Cardano est né àPavie. En 1526, il devint docteur en médecine à Padoue puis il
http://www.lycee-international.com/travaux/HISTMATH/cardano/
Liste de Mathématiciens Al Khwarizmi Apollonius de Perge Archimède Argand Jean Bezout Etienne Bombelli Rafaele Boole George Cardano Girolamo Cauchy Augustin Chasles Michel De Moivre Abraham De Morgan Augustus Del Ferro Scipione Descartes René Eratosthene Euclide Fermat Pierre Ferrari Ludovico Fibonacci Leonardo Galois Evariste Gauss Carl Germain Sophie Huygens Christiaan Leibniz Gottfried Pascal Blaise Peano Guiseppe Pythagore Tartaglia Nicolo Viete François Zenon d Elée Cardano Girolamo
CARDANO (1501-1576) anniversaire. Il cessa alors de se nourrir et mourut en effet le jour dit. De subtilitate Formule de Cardan Il faut utiliser les formules de Cardan (Gerolamo Cardano 1501-1576) qu'il publie dans son "Ars magna" "le grand art"
Ensuite, on pose , et on obtient
et
Liste par ordre alphabétique

3. Quotation By Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano (1501 1576). To throw in a fair game at Hazards onlythree-spots, when something great is at stake, or some business
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Quotations2/924.html
Girolamo Cardano
To throw in a fair game at Hazards only three-spots, when something great is at stake, or some business is the hazard, is a natural occurrence and deserves to be so deemed; and even when they come up the same way for a second time if the throw be repeated. If the third and fourth plays are the same, surely there is occasion for suspicion on the part of a prudent man.
De Vita Propria Liber.

4. Ars Magna Or The Rules Of Algebra Cardano, Girolamo
Title Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra Subject Science Author cardano girolamoDover Celtic Alphabet04869995 Solo, Dan X. 24 Art Nouveau Di
http://www.books-including.com/Cardano-Girolamo/Ars-Magna-or-the-Rules-of-Algebr
Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra Cardano, Girolamo
Title: Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra
Subject: Science
Author: Cardano Girolamo
Dover Celtic Alphabet-04869995...

Solo, Dan X. 24 Art Nouveau Di...

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5. Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano 15011576 Girolamo Cardano is sometimes known by hisLatin name, Cardan. He was an illegitimate child of a lawyer
http://www.stetson.edu/~efriedma/periodictable/html/Cd.html
Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano is sometimes known by his Latin name, Cardan. He was an illegitimate child of a lawyer in Milan, whose expertise in mathematics was such that he was consulted by Leonardo da Vinci on questions of geometry. Cardano at first became his father's assistant, but began to think about an academic career after learning mathematics from his father. He studied medicine, and was a brilliant student. But he was outspoken and highly critical, so he was not well liked. Cardano squandered the small bequest from his father and turned to gambling to make a living. Cardano's understanding of probability meant he had an advantage over his opponents and, in general, he won more than he lost. Gambling became an addiction that was to last many years and rob Cardano of valuable time, money and reputation. Cardano was awarded his doctorate in medicine in 1525. He set up a small, and not very successful, medical practice in Sacco, where he married. He repeatedly applied to the College of Physicians in Milan but was not allowed membership due to his reputation and his ignoble birth. Unable to practise medicine, Cardano reverted again to gambling to pay his way. Things went so badly that he was forced to pawn his wife's jewellery and even some of his furniture. Cardano was fortunate to obtain the post of lecturer in mathematics in Milan which gave him plenty of free time, and he used some of this to treat a few patients, despite not being a member of the College of Physicians. Cardano achieved some near miraculous cures and his growing reputation as a doctor led to his being consulted by members of the College, to which he was eventually admitted in 1539.

6. Biography: Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano was an Italian mathematician, doctor, astrologer, and prolificwriter who lived in the sixteenth century. Biography Girolamo Cardano.
http://www.allsands.com/Entertainment/People/jeromegirolamo_akg_gn.htm
Biography: Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano is by far one of the most interesting persons to have lived in the last millenium. He was terribly abused as a child. He was the result of an abortion attempt that failed. From these humble and sad beginnings grew a formidable scholar and world-renowned surgeon, just to name a few of his many specialties. His father was an attorney who was known to associate with top scientists and artists of the day. He was sought by royalty for his expertise. Despite his success, family disgrace quickly destroyed what so many years of hard work had achieved. Like during his sad youth, he left this world much the same way. In the same way that he had spent his childhood- sad and alone. I. Girolamo Cardano, also referred to as Jerome Cardan, and Gerolamo Cardano, was born in Pavia, Italy on September 24, 1501. He died in Rome, Italy on September 21, 1576 by his own hand. bodyOffer(7296) II. After a torturous childhood filled with shame and abuse, Cardano escaped to the University of Pavia, where he received a BA. Later he received a Doctorate at the University of Padua. III. Cardano became a skilled doctor, whose name is often included with other renowned physicians such as Hippocrates, Galen, and many others.

7. NYRB: Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano. Girolamo Cardano (15011576) was born in Pavia,Italy. A professor of mathematics at Padua, and of medicine at
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrb/authors/8977
NYRB home About NYRB Authors Browse ... Introductions
Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano (1501-1576) was born in Pavia, Italy. A professor of mathematics at Padua, and of medicine at Pavia and Bologna, he was the the author of more than a hundred books on subjects ranging from the natural sciences to medicine, history, and music. The Book of My Life
At once picaresque adventure and campus comedy, curriculum vitae and last will, The Book of My Life is an extraordinary Renaissance self-portrait.

8. Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano 1501 1576. Girolamo Cardano (more commonly knownas Jerome Cardan) was an Italian doctor and mathematician. He
http://www.geocities.com/type3kids/timcardan.html
Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano (more commonly known as Jerome Cardan) was an Italian doctor and mathematician. He was born in 1501 and died in 1576, three days before his 75th birthday. He calculated odds for gambling and wrote the first gambler's manual. Cardan also worked on problem solving. Cardan's father was a lawyer and he was called upon about questions on geometry. Cardan was inspired by his father and became his father's assistant before becoming a mathematician himself. Cardan invented an algebraic formula for finding square roots. Cardan turned to gambling to raise his finances. Cardan's understanding of odds meant that he had an advantage over the other players and won more than he lost. When Cardan was older, he adopted his grandson when the boy's parents died.
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9. Cardano, Girolamo Science
Title Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra Subject Science Author cardano girolamoWolfson, Allan B., MD,Paris, P Wallace, M. Ann,Klosinski, Dea
http://www.booksreference.com/Cardano-Girolamo/Ars-Magna-or-the-Rules-of-Algebra
Cardano, Girolamo Science
Title: Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra
Subject: Science
Author: Cardano Girolamo
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10. Ars Magna Or The Rules Of Algebra Cardano, Girolamo Science
Girolamo Science. Title Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra SubjectScience Author cardano girolamo Eason, Cassandra Complete Guid
http://www.booksseeker.com/Cardano-Girolamo/Ars-Magna-or-the-Rules-of-Algebra-04
Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra Cardano, Girolamo Science
Title: Ars Magna or the Rules of Algebra
Subject: Science
Author: Cardano Girolamo
Eason, Cassandra Complete Guid...

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11. Cardano, Girolamo
Catalog of the Scientific Community cardano, girolamo. Note Rome. SourcesAngelo Bellini, girolamo cardano e il suo tempo, (Milan, 1947).
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/cardano.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Cardano, Girolamo
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Pavia, 24 Sept. 1501
Died: Rome, 21 Sept. 1576
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Lawyer
His father was a jurist of considerable learning, a friend of Leonardo da Vinci. He is said to have been of noble descent, but I gathered that the line was so attentuated as hardly to exist. Cardano was born out of wedlock, and the father, who did eventually marry the mother, did not live with the family until Cardano was seven.
While not poor, the family hardly seems to have been wealthymore affluent than poor, however.
3. Nationality
Birth: Italy
Career: Italy
Death: Italy
4. Education
Schooling: Pavia, M.D.; Padua
Cardano began his university studies in 1518 at Pavia and completed his B.A. at Padua. He returned to Pavia for the M.D. in 1526.
5. Religion
Affiliation: Catholic
In 1570 he was imprisoned for a few months by the Inquisition. He was accused of heresy, particularly for having cast the horoscope of Christ and having attrbuted the events of His life to the influence of the stars. He was sentenced to abjuration and agreed to give up teaching.
6. Scientific Disciplines

12. Jerome Cardano
Physician and mathematician worked with probabilities, published many books, and treated the Archbishop of Scotland for asthma. Jerome cardano. born 1501 in Pavia, Italy cardano was an ambitious, dishonest, hottempered, quarrelsome, conceited and cardano's father was a physician, lawyer and geometer, and
http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/Math/Cardano.html
Jerome Cardano
born: 1501 in Pavia, Italy
died: September 20, 1576 in San Marco, Italy Cardano was an ambitious, dishonest, hot-tempered, quarrelsome, conceited and humorless man, but capable of generosity, kindliness and merciless self-revelation. His parents were an abominable pair; his favorite son was executed for murder; his other son was a scoundrel who managed to escape the gallows but brought Cardano nothing but unhappiness and disgrace.
(J. R. Newman) Prominent physician. Prolific writer on all topics. First published solutions for roots of 3rd and 4th degree polynomials. First booklet on probability. Cardano's father was a physician, lawyer and geometer, and the whole family beat Cardano as a child, only stopping later because it might hinder his job of carrying his father's baggage. At 19 Cardano entered the University of Pavia to study medicine. Because of his background and personality, good positions were not available to him and he became a country doctor in a small village. Cardano considered his life idyllic: "I gambled, played musical instruments, took walks, was of good cheer and studied only rarely. I had no pains, no fears. It was the springtime of my life." Of all of his writings, Cardano is primarily remembered for Ars Magna, the first great Latin book entirely about algebra. It discussed the theory of equations and included for the first time in print techniques for solving cubic and quartic equations. The techniques, however, were not discovered by Cardano. His student, Ferrari, discovered the method for solving quartics, and Tartaglia discovered the method for cubics. Tartaglia was understandably upset to see his secret method for solving cubics included in Cardano's Ars Magna, and he accused Cardano, who had promised to keep the method a secret, of theft and a number of other low crimes. Ferrari, sharp-tongued and hot-headed, was put in charge of defending his teacher Cardano in public, and a public feud raged.

13. Girolamo Cardano - Mathematics And The Liberal Arts
girolamo cardano Mathematics and the Liberal Arts cardano's name also appears as Hieronymus Cardanus, Geronimo cardano, and Jerome Cardan. To expand search, see Italy in the 1600s. Laterally related topic Galileo Galilei.
http://math.truman.edu/~thammond/history/Cardano.html
Girolamo Cardano - Mathematics and the Liberal Arts
Cardano's name also appears as Hieronymus Cardanus, Geronimo Cardano, and Jerome Cardan. To expand search, see Italy in the 1600s . Laterally related topic: Galileo Galilei The Mathematics and the Liberal Arts pages are intended to be a resource for student research projects and for teachers interested in using the history of mathematics in their courses. Many pages focus on ethnomathematics and in the connections between mathematics and other disciplines. The notes in these pages are intended as much to evoke ideas as to indicate what the books and articles are about. They are not intended as reviews. However, some items have been reviewed in Mathematical Reviews , published by The American Mathematical Society. When the mathematical review (MR) number and reviewer are known to the author of these pages, they are given as part of the bibliographic citation. Subscribing institutions can access the more recent MR reviews online through MathSciNet Biggs, N. L. The roots of combinatorics. Historia Math.

14. Kurzbiographie Von Girolamo Cardano
girolamo cardano. Geboren 24. September 1501 in Pavia
http://cip.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de/~muellerm/cardanobio.html
Girolamo Cardano
Geboren: 24. September 1501 in Pavia
Gestorben: 21. September 1576 in Rom
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15. Biography Of Girolamo Cardano
Selected Biographical References. cardano, girolamo. The Book of My Life. Sv cardano,girolamo by Mario Gliozzi. Ore, Oystein. cardano The Gambling Scholar.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/science/parshall/cardano.html
Biography of Girolamo Cardano
Girolamo Cardano ( PORTRAIT - 46K ) led a rich life about which we know many details thanks to his autobiography, De vita propria liber (The Book of My Life) In 1534, Cardano and his family moved to Milan where he took up teaching duties at the schools founded by Tommaso Piatti for instruction in Greek, astronomy, dialectics, and mathematics. This marked the beginning of his active interest in mathematics. In 1539, he wrote his first mathematical treatise, Practica arithmetica (Practical arithmetic) , and in 1545 he produced his greatest mathematical work, Artis magnae sive de regulis algebraicis liber unus (The Great Art) , which launched his priority dispute with fellow Italian, Niccolo Tartaglia At the same time that he took up his mathematical teaching duties, Cardano maintained his medical practice and saw his status in that profession grow to such proportions that he soon enjoyed a reputation second only to that of the great Andreas Vesalius. In 1543 he accepted the chair of medicine at the University of Pavia, holding that position until 1560 with a seven-year hiatus from 1552 to 1559. The year 1552, in fact, found Cardano in Scotland treating the Archbishop of Edinburgh, an indication of just how far his reputation as a physician had reached. As Cardano admits, however, his life also had its bitter disappointments. In his words, in 1560, his eldest son "had been accused of attempting to poison his wife while she was still in the weakness attendant upon childbirth. On the 17th day of February he was apprehended, and fifty-three days after, on April 13th, he was beheaded in prison. And this was my supreme, my crowning misfortune." (p. 93) Cardano was forced in disgrace from Milan, ultimately securing a professorship of medicine at the University of Bologna. Troubles revisited him in 1570 when he was imprisoned by the Inquisition for the heresy of casting the horoscope of Jesus Christ. Having cast his own horoscope and having predicted that he would live to the age of seventy-five, Cardano committed suicide on 21 September, 1576.

16. History Today: CARDANO'S SOLUTION.(Girolamo Cardano's Works)
Gain insight into the farreaching historical significance of this Renaissance polymath's major work. The man was girolamo cardano (1501-76), a man in the quintessential Renaissance tradition.
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CARDANO'S SOLUTION.(Girolamo Cardano's works) Author/s: Allan Ashworth Issue: Jan, 1999 Girolamo Cardano was one of the great Renaissance polymaths in the tradition of Leonardo. Allan Ashworth explains the significance of his key mathematical work. `A man is nothing but his mind; if that be out of order, all is amiss, and if it be well, the rest is at ease'. Girolamo Cardano In a rear-wheel-drive car, the gear box is connected to the rear axle by a type of universal joint known as a cardan-shaft. It has the effect of absorbing the vertical movement of the vehicle. Not only does this joint mean a smoother drive, but it is more efficient and less prone to breakdown because the drive shaft is always at a ninety-degree angle to the axle. The first such universal joint was fitted to a carriage belonging to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V in 1548. This piece of engineering alone would have shown its inventor (after whom it was named) to be a remarkable man; but there was a lot more to him than this. The man was Girolamo Cardano (1501-76), a man in the quintessential Renaissance tradition.

17. Portrait Of Girolamo Cardano
Portrait of girolamo cardano. This profile of cardano is taken from a woodcut whichin turn was based on a medal from the Mint of Milan ascribed to Leone Leone.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/science/parshall/cardport.html
Portrait of Girolamo Cardano
This profile of Cardano is taken from a woodcut which in turn was based on a medal from the Mint of Milan ascribed to Leone Leone. It first appeared in 1554 on the title page of the Basel edition of De Subtilitate (Ludovicus Lucius anno 1554). Later portraits all derive from this woodcut. An alternative and larger (102K) image of Cardano can be viewed by clicking here Return to Bigraphy of Cardano.

18. - Great Books -
girolamo cardano (15011576), In his autobiography, De vita proprialiber (The Book of My Life) cardano describes that he was born
http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_283.asp?period_id=18&category_id=9

19. CARDANO, Girolamo [Gerolamo]
Translate this page cardano, girolamo Gerolamo, * 24.9. 1501 in Pavia, † 21.9. 1576in Rom. - Arzt, Mathematiker, Philosoph, Astrologe. GC kam als
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20. Cardan
girolamo cardano. girolamo cardano's name was Cardan in Latin and he issometimes known by the English version of his name Jerome Cardan.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Cardan.html
Girolamo Cardano
Born: 24 Sept 1501 in Pavia, Duchy of Milan (now Italy)
Died: 21 Sept 1576 in Rome (now Italy)
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to see seven larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Girolamo Cardano 's name was Cardan in Latin and he is sometimes known by the English version of his name Jerome Cardan. Girolamo Cardano was the illegitimate child of Fazio Cardano and Chiara Micheria. His father was a lawyer in Milan but his expertise in mathematics was such that he was consulted by Leonardo da Vinci on questions of geometry. In addition to his law practice, Fazio lectured on geometry, both at the University of Pavia and, for a longer spell, at the Piatti foundation in Milan. When he was in his fifties, Fazio met Chiara Micheria, who was a young widow in her thirties, struggling to raise three children. Chiara became pregnant but, before she was due to give birth, the plague hit Milan and she was persuaded to leave the city for the relative safety of nearby Pavia to stay with wealthy friends of Fazio. Thus Cardan was born in Pavia but his mother's joy was short lived when she received news that her first three children had died of the plague in Milan. Chiara lived apart from Fazio for many years but, later in life, they did marry. Cardan at first became his father's assistant but he was a sickly child and Fazio had to get help from two nephews when the work became too much for Cardan . However, Cardan began to wish for greater things than an assistant to his father. Fazio had taught his son mathematics and Cardano began to think of an academic career. After an argument, Fazio allowed Cardan to go university and he entered Pavia University, where his father had studied, to read medicine despite his father's wish that he should study law.

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