Extractions: M*** (avocat, BN ? ) B. M. Rennes 90120 (5278) M*** B. S. H. M. Brest R2860 M*** B. S. H. M. Brest R6424 M. C. B. M. Rennes 55811 MacLaurin , Colin (1698-1746) B. S. H. M. Brest R2896 B. S. H. M. Brest R492 1 : XVI-LI-344 p., 18 pl. 2 : VIII-322 p., 12 pl., errata : 5 p. B. S. H. M. Brest R3688 et 3689 B. S. H. M. Brest R5793 1 : VI-412 p., 25 pl. 2 : p. 413-764 p., pl. 26-40. B. M. Morlaix 10106 Magellan , Jean Hyacinthe de B. S. H. M. Brest R3154 Maggi B. S. H. M. Brest R6831 Magino , Jo. Antonio (1555-1617) Magni , Ludovici B. S. H. M. Brest R2915 Maingon B. S. H. M. Brest R3164 Mairan , Jean Jacques Dortous de (1678-1771) B. S. H. M. Brest R3770 B. M. Rennes 29180 B. S. H. M. Brest R4343 Maire , Christoforo , Nicolas de (1650-1729) Manesson Mallet Allain (1630-1706) B. M. Rennes 32228. Ex. de Gouin du Rouvre puis de Michel Marion. B. M. Rennes 52160 (5342) Manilius Marcus B. S. H. M. Brest R2870 et 2871 B. S. H. M. Brest R326 Marcoz , J. B. P. Marguerie , de Marie Marie e B. S. H. M. Brest R3739 Mariotte B. S. H. M. Brest R3746
Lebensdaten Von Mathematikern Translate this page 1977) Mostowski, Andrzej (1913 - 1975) Moufang, Ruth (1905 - 1977) Mouton, Gabriel(1618 - 1694) Muir, Thomas (1844 - 1934) mydorge, claude (1585 - 1647). http://www.mathe.tu-freiberg.de/~hebisch/cafe/lebensdaten.html
Extractions: Marc Cohn Dies ist eine Sammlung, die aus verschiedenen Quellen stammt, u. a. aus Jean Dieudonne, Geschichte der Mathematik, 1700 - 1900, VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin 1985. Helmut Gericke, Mathematik in Antike und Orient - Mathematik im Abendland, Fourier Verlag, Wiesbaden 1992. Otto Toeplitz, Die Entwicklung der Infinitesimalrechnung, Springer, Berlin 1949. MacTutor History of Mathematics archive A B C ... Z Abbe, Ernst (1840 - 1909)
Neue Seite 1 Translate this page Mouton, Gabriel (1618 - 1694). Muir, Thomas (1844 - 1934). mydorge, claude (1585- 1647). Naimark, Mark (1909 - 1978). Napier (Neper), John (1550 - 4.4.1617). http://www.mathe-ecke.de/mathematiker.htm
Extractions: Abbe, Ernst (1840 - 1909) Abel, Niels Henrik (5.8.1802 - 6.4.1829) Abraham bar Hiyya (1070 - 1130) Abraham, Max (1875 - 1922) Abu Kamil, Shuja (um 850 - um 930) Abu'l-Wafa al'Buzjani (940 - 998) Ackermann, Wilhelm (1896 - 1962) Adams, John Couch (5.6.1819 - 21.1.1892) Adams, John Frank (5.11.1930 - 7.1.1989) Adelard von Bath (1075 - 1160) Adler, August (1863 - 1923) Adrain, Robert (1775 - 1843) Aepinus, Franz Ulrich Theodosius (13.12.1724 - 10.8.1802) Agnesi, Maria (1718 - 1799) Ahlfors, Lars (1907 - 1996) Ahmed ibn Yusuf (835 - 912) Ahmes (um 1680 - um 1620 v. Chr.) Aida Yasuaki (1747 - 1817) Aiken, Howard Hathaway (1900 - 1973) Airy, George Biddell (27.7.1801 - 2.1.1892) Aithoff, David (1854 - 1934) Aitken, Alexander (1895 - 1967) Ajima, Chokuyen (1732 - 1798) Akhiezer, Naum Il'ich (1901 - 1980) al'Battani, Abu Allah (um 850 - 929) al'Biruni, Abu Arrayhan (973 - 1048) al'Chaijami (? - 1123) al'Haitam, Abu Ali (965 - 1039) al'Kashi, Ghiyath (1390 - 1450) al'Khwarizmi, Abu Abd-Allah ibn Musa (um 790 - um 850) Albanese, Giacomo (1890 - 1948) Albert von Sachsen (1316 - 8.7.1390)
Olivier THILL. Book Review. Descartes By Genevieve Rodis-Lewis Pierre Descartes avait épousé sa fille claude ; one might think claude is the Plusieurssavants de l'époque, mydorge, Fermat, Pascal père, la concilliaient http://members.aol.com/OlivThill/private/bogrldes.htm
Extractions: Rating: *** (medium) Table of contents This book has been translated in English. Comments: Sometimes, her grammar is not very orthodox. She likes to use "en" at places where the reader is expecting another preposition, e.g. "Il manifestera cette passion en ses derniers mois" instead of "au cours de ses derniers mois", etc. Sometimes, she uses a pronoun or a demonstrative adjective, and the reader misunderstands what or who is represented by that pronoun or adjective, e.g., page 18: ; one might think Claude is the daughter of the king or the queen, but she is only the daughter of the great grandfather. She follows a chronological order, but she inserts many episodes that occurs at another period of time than the one she is talking about. And many dates are expressed without the year, or are not mentioned at all. She refers to many studies, and sometimes the reader would like to have at least a quick summary of these studies, instead of just a reference. Besides, I have noticed a few errors, and questionable statements:
Earliest Known Uses Of Some Of The Words Of Mathematics (P) claude mydorge used the word parameter with the meaning of latus rectum in 1631according to two Italian scientific encyclopedias (Dizionario enciclopedico http://members.aol.com/jeff570/p.html
Extractions: Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (P) Last revision: Mar. 11, 2003 p-ADIC INTEGER was coined by Kurt Hensel (1861-1941) (Katz, page 824). P-VALUE and prob-value. David (1995) discusses the difficulties in dating P -value, the idea of which goes back to Laplaceat leastbefore opting for a reference from 1960! Subsequently David (1998) chose W. E. Deming's Statistical Adjustment of Data of 1943. When Deming wrote the phrase "value of P " was current. It was used in Karl Pearson's (1900) "On the Criterion that a Given System of Deviations from the Probable in the Case of Correlated System of Variables is such that it can be Reasonably Supposed to have Arisen from Random Sampling" ( Philosophical Magazine , 157-175) and very prominently in R. A. Fisher's Statistical Methods for Research Workers (1925). In recent discussions the use of P -values (or prob-values) is often set against the use of fixed significance levels, especially 5%. It is ironical then that the "value of P " should be such a feature of Fisher's book when that work did so much to popularise the 5% level. [John Aldrich] PAIRWISE.
I1718: Claude Antoine DE BELOT DE FERREUX (août 1670 - 16 Mars 1744) Translate this page SéPULTURE AFT 16 mars 1744, Eglise St Paul, Paris,,, France. Famille 1 MarieDE mydorge MARIAGE 1713 3604 3605. claude Antoine DE http://users.skynet.be/omarquet/genealogie/Index/html/d0000/g0000047.html
I4644: DE FROIDEBISE (____ - ____) Translate this page PERSONNES. PAGE D'ACCUEIL HTML créé par GED2HTML v3.5e-WIN95 (Sep 26 1998) le07/10/99 110848 . Marie DE mydorge. - . Famille 1 claude Antoine DE http://users.skynet.be/omarquet/genealogie/Index/html/d0001/g0000047.html
Extractions: _Catherine DE HANEFFE DE FROIDEBISE _Henri DE JUPILLE ... PAGE D'ACCUEIL HTML créé par GED2HTML v3.5e-WIN95 (Sep 26 1998) le 07/10/99 11:08:48 Famille 1 Claude Antoine DE BELOT DE FERREUX Claude Joseph DE BELOT DE FERREUX Jacques François DE BELOT DE FERREUX Marie DE MYDORGE PERSONNES Avec dispense de Rome, il épousa sa cousine. Généalogie de Belot
Mathematicians Gregory of St. Vincent (15841667) *RB *W. claude mydorge (1585-1647) *SB *mt*W. Jan Brozek (Broscius) (1585-1652) *W. Joachim Jungius (1587-1657) *SB *W. http://www.chill.org/csss/mathcsss/mathematicians.html
Extractions: List of Mathematicians printed from: http://aleph0.clarku.edu:80/~djoyce/mathhist/mathhist.html 1700 B.C.E. Ahmes (c. 1650 B.C.E.) *mt 700 B.C.E. Baudhayana (c. 700) 600 B.C.E. Thales of Miletus (c. 630-c 550) *MT Apastamba (c. 600) Anaximander of Miletus (c. 610-c. 547) *SB Pythagoras of Samos (c. 570-c. 490) *SB *MT Anaximenes of Miletus (fl. 546) *SB Cleostratus of Tenedos (c. 520) 500 B.C.E. Katyayana (c. 500) Nabu-rimanni (c. 490) Kidinu (c. 480) Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c. 500-c. 428) *SB *mt Zeno of Elea (c. 490-c. 430) *mt Antiphon of Rhamnos (the Sophist) (c. 480-411) *SB *mt Oenopides of Chios (c. 450?) *SB Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *mt Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB Meton (c. 430) *SB Hippias of Elis (fl. c. 425) *SB *mt Theodorus of Cyrene (c. 425) Socrates (469-399) Philolaus of Croton (d. c. 390) *SB Democritus of Abdera (c. 460-370) *SB *mt 400 B.C.E. Hippasus of Metapontum (or of Sybaris or Croton) (c. 400?) Archytas of Tarentum (of Taras) (c. 428-c. 347) *SB *mt Plato (427-347) *SB *MT Theaetetus of Athens (c. 415-c. 369) *mt Leodamas of Thasos (fl. c. 380) *SB
History Of Mathematics: Chronology Of Mathematicians A list of all of the important mathematicians working in a given century.Category Science Math Mathematicians Directories Gregory of St. Vincent (15841667) *RB *W; claude mydorge (1585-1647)*SB *MT *W; Jan Brozek (Broscius) (1585-1652) *W; Joachim Jungius http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/chronology.html
Extractions: Note: there are also a chronological lists of mathematical works and mathematics for China , and chronological lists of mathematicians for the Arabic sphere Europe Greece India , and Japan 1700 B.C.E. 100 B.C.E. 1 C.E. To return to this table of contents from below, just click on the years that appear in the headers. Footnotes (*MT, *MT, *RB, *W, *SB) are explained below Ahmes (c. 1650 B.C.E.) *MT Baudhayana (c. 700) Thales of Miletus (c. 630-c 550) *MT Apastamba (c. 600) Anaximander of Miletus (c. 610-c. 547) *SB Pythagoras of Samos (c. 570-c. 490) *SB *MT Anaximenes of Miletus (fl. 546) *SB Cleostratus of Tenedos (c. 520) Katyayana (c. 500) Nabu-rimanni (c. 490) Kidinu (c. 480) Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (c. 500-c. 428) *SB *MT Zeno of Elea (c. 490-c. 430) *MT Antiphon of Rhamnos (the Sophist) (c. 480-411) *SB *MT Oenopides of Chios (c. 450?) *SB Leucippus (c. 450) *SB *MT Hippocrates of Chios (fl. c. 440) *SB Meton (c. 430) *SB
Encyclopædia Britannica Includes links to related sites. claude mydorge University of St Andrews Briefbiography of this French mathematician supplemented with references. http://www.britannica.com/search?query=monet, claude&ct=igv&fuzzy=N&show=10&star
DESCARTES, RENÉ Here, too, he made the acquaintance of claude mydorge, one of the foremost mathematiciansof France, and renewed an early intimacy with Mann Mersenne (qv http://51.1911encyclopedia.org/D/DE/DESCARTES_REN_.htm
Extractions: DES BARREAUX, JACQUES VALLEE, SIEUR (16021673), French poet, was born in Paris in 1602. His great-uncle, Geoffroy-Vallée, had been hanged in 1574 for the authorship of a book called Le Fléau de la Joy. His nephew appears to have inherited his scepticism, which on one occasion nearly cost him his life. The peasants of Touraine attributed to the presence of the unbeliever an untimely frost that damaged the vines, and proposed to stone him, His authorship of the sonnet on Penitence, by which he is generally known, has been disputed. He had the further distinction of being the first of the lovers of Marion Delorme. He died at Chalon-sur-Saône on the 9th of May 1673. See Poesies de Des Barreaux (1904), edited by F. Lachbvre. DESCARTES, RENÉ (15961650), French philosopher, was born at La Haye, in Touraine, midway between Tours and Poitiers, on the 31st of March 1596, and died at Stockholm on the 11th of February 1650. The house where he was born is still shown, and a métairie about 3 m. off retains the name of Les Cartes. His family on both sides was of Poitevin.descent. Joachim Descartes, his father, having purchased a commission as counsellor in the parlement of Rennes, introduced the family into that demi-noblesse of the robe which, between the bourgeoisie and the high nobility, maintained a lofty rank in French society. He had three children, a son who afterwards succeeded to his father in the parlement, a daughter who married a M. du Crevis, and René, after whose birth the mother died.
Biografia Di Cartesio Translate this page in Bretannia e nel Poitou, Cartesio trascorre questo periodo a Parigi dove entrain contatto con eminenti studiosi come il matematico claude mydorge e il http://www.liceo-classico.arezzo.it/lc100/lc2101.htm
Extractions: Cartesio e il grande progetto della ragione René Descartes ( in latino Cartesius, in italiano Cartesio ) nasce il 31 marzo a La Haye in Turenna, terzo figlio di Joachim Descartes, avvocato e consigliere al Parlamento di Bretagna a Rennes e di Jeanne Brochard. La famiglia, che possiede rendite e terre, conta numerosi magistrati, medici e funzionari delle imposte: il padre è insignito del titolo di "escuyer", primo grado della nobiltà. Alla morte della madre per parto, René è affidato alla nonna materna. Di salute delicata, impara a leggere ed a scrivere in casa, sotto la guida di un precettore. Compie gli studi nel collegio gesuita di La Fléche, dove resterà circa nove anni seguendo i tre corsi regolari di grammatica, retorica e filosofia che comprendevano insegnamenti di logica, dottrine umanistiche, fisica, metafisica e matamatica con elementi di teoria musicale.A causa delle sue condizioni di salute, gode di un regime di favore, con una camera personale e la possibilità di riposare a letto sino alle dieci di mattina, esentato dall'obbligo di sveglia alle cinque. Uscito dal collegio, ubbidendo ai desideri del padre, si reca a Poitiers per studiare diritto.
René Descartes (1596-1650) Descartes also made friends with the mathematician claude mydorge and with FatherMarin Mersenne, a man of universal learning who during his lifetime wrote http://www.hfac.uh.edu/gbrown/philosophers/leibniz/BritannicaPages/Descartes/Des
Extractions: died February 11, 1650, Stockholm, Sweden Latin Renatius Cartesius Family and regional background Descartes was born in La Haye (now Descartes), France. Although La Haye was in Touraine, Descartes's family connections were south across the Creuse River in Poitou Poitiers Education, travels, and early influences Henri IV. (1553-1610) In 1614 Descartes went to Poitiers , where he took a law degree in 1616. At this time Huguenot Poitiers was in virtual revolt against Louis XIII. Descartes's father probably expected him to enter Parlement, but, because the legal age for that was 27, Descartes had seven years to wait. In 1618 he went to Breda in the Netherlands for 15 months as a student in mathematics and military architecture in the peacetime army of the Protestant ruler, Maurice, prince of Orange. There Descartes met the physicist Isaac Beeckman, who encouraged him in science and mathematics and for whom Descartes wrote his Musicae Compendium (written 1618, published 1650; Compendium of Music During the period 1619 to 1628, Descartes traveled in northern and southern Europe, saying that he was studying the book of the world. While in Bohemia in 1619, he had three dreams that defined for him his career as a scientist and a philosopher seeking knowledge for the benefit of humanity. By 1620 he had conceived of a universal method of deductive reasoning, applicable to all the sciences. He had also investigated reports of esoteric knowledge such as theosophical claims to command nature. Although disappointed with the followers of the magician Raymond Lulle and the alchemist Cornelius Agrippa, Descartes was impressed by the German mathematician and Rosicrucian Johann Faulhaber.
Vol. 1 Ch. 2 circle of the 1630's known as the Académie Parisienne which included Roberval,Etienne Pascal, Marin Mersenne, Blaise Pascal, claude mydorge and Girard http://www.mmi.unimaas.nl/people/Veltman/books/vol1/ch2.htm
Extractions: 1. Introduction The importance of centres in the development and diffusion of Renaissance culture, assumed by Vasari (1550),1 and discussed by Burckhardt (1860),2 became the topic of an important book by Chastel (1965),3 who acknowledged that there were problems with the approach. For while Florence, Lombardy, Rome, Naples, Venice and Padua were of enormous significance, smaller cities such as Lodi and Prato were also important. In a subsequent book on Italy's workshops (1969)4 Chastel gave greater emphasis to these smaller cities surrounding the larger ones, as, for example, Bergamo, Brescia, Como, Vigevano and Pavia in the case of Milan. Since then there has been increasing attention in the relation between centre and periphery. Ginzburg and Castelnuovo,5 in a fundamental study, have challenged the very notion of a centre. A detailed study would need to confront these problems of method, and might draw parallels between criticism of great centres and the fashion to criticize great individuals. Our concern is more modest: to outline the development of the major centres of publication regarding perspective and to trace how these shift with time. Centres in cities were usually due to the presence of a court, university and/or a workshop. They could be centres in at least three different senses: as places of production, as places which attracted painters to meet, or as places of transit. Nor was it just a question of painters. As Settis has shown, humanist counselors played an important part in these developments.
Catalogue De La Brède Translate this page Muzio, Girolamo, Giustinopolitano 1736, 2135. mydorge, claude 1679. Myia, fillede Pythagore 1475. Mylaeus, Christophorus Voir Milieu, Christophe. http://www.u-grenoble3.fr/montesquieu/catalogue/brede.html
CONINE claude mydorge (15851647), a French geometer and friend of Descartes, publisheda work De sectioni bus conicis in which he greatly simplified the cumbrous http://6.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CO/CONINE.htm
Extractions: px for the hyperbola. Pappus in his commentary on Apollonius states that these names were given in virtue of the above relations; but according to Eutocius the curves were named the parabola, ellipse or hyperbola, according as the angle of the cone was equal to, less than, or greater than a right angle. The word parabola was used by Archimedes, who was prior to Apollonius; but this may be an interpolation. The Conies of Apollonius was translated into Arabic by Tobit ben Korra in the 9th century, and this edition was followed by Halley in 1710. Although the Arabs were in full possession of the store of knowledge of the geometry of conies which the Greeks had accumulated, they did little to increase it; the only advance made consisted in the application of describing intersecting conies so as to solve algebraic equations. The great pioneer in this field was Omar Khayyám, who flourished iii the 11th century. These discoveries were unknown in western Europe for many centuries, and were re-invented aid developed by many European mathematicians. In 1522 there was published an original work on conies by Johann Werner of Nuremburg. This work, the earliest published in Christian Europe, treats the conic sections in relation to the original cone, the procedure differing from that of the Greek geometers. Werner was followed by Franciscus Maurolycus of Messina, who adopted the same method, and added considerably to the discoveries of Apollonius. Claude Mydorge (15851647), a French geometer and friend of Descartes, published a work De sectioni bus conicis in which he greatly simplified the cumbrous proofs of Apollonius, whose method of treatment he followed.
TH E SCIEN TIFI C REVOLUTION WESTFALL CATALOGUE - SCIENTIFIC SOURCES claude Palisca, 'Vincenzo Galilei', in F. Blume, ed., Die Musik many friendsor correspondents were Beeckman, Galileo, Snel, mydorge, Patin, Bouchard http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch/SAM-G.htm
Extractions: 6. Scientific Disciplines : Anatomy; Medicine; Mcr; His name is especially connected with anatomy, particularly the skeletal system, which he summarized in Anatomes ossium novis inventis illustrata (1689). The book contains the first description of a case of what was presumably tuberculosis of the bone. He carried out morphological and microscopic investigations on human bones, using chemical reagents in order to bring out the fine structure. In 1720 he did a close study of the pneumonia epidemic raging in Rome. His study was anatomicopathological in approach and based on carefully conducted autopsies. The study led to his Relazione de' male di petto , 1720. He also published other medical works.
Les Mathématiciens Les Plus Connus. Translate this page CLAIRAUT Alexis-claude (1713-1765). diplômé en droit de l'Université de Poitiers,étudia les mathématiques à Paris sous la direction de mydorge et de http://www.webmaths.com/divers/matheux.php3
Extractions: A B C D ... H I J K L M ... P Q R S T U V W X Y Z (Liste incomplète) ABEL Niels Hnrik ( 1802-1829 ) AL-BIRUNI (Abû Rayhân Muhammad ben Ahmad) (973- Né à Khiwa dans l'actuel Turkménistan, al-Biruni est un savant universel. A vingt ans, il se rend à la cour des Ziyârides où il écrit sa Chronologie. Il y rencontre le célèbre philosophe Ibn Sînâ, dont le nom déformé donnera Avicenne en Occident, avec lequel il ne s'entend guère. De retour dans sa ville natale, il est capturé lors de troubles politiques. Une fois libéré, il fait de nombreux séjours en Inde dont on ne sait presque rien. C'est certainement lors d'un de ces séjours qu'il ramène un énorme traité : Ta rîh al-Hind. Il y donne une description très détaillée de ce pays, de ses coutumes ainsi que de ses connaissances scientifiques. Il écrit aussi une encyclopédie sur l'astronomie. En géométrie, il démontre d'une manière élégante la formule relative à l'aire du triangle et à son périmètre. C'est lui qui établit le lien entre l'inscriptibilité d'un polygone régulier à 9 côtés et l'équation du troisième degré