Beyond Cartesian limits: Leibniz's passage from algebraic to ``transcendental mathematics
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Publication:2490949
DOI10.1016/j.hm.2004.02.001zbMath1125.01006OpenAlexW2086892500WikidataQ56828569 ScholiaQ56828569MaRDI QIDQ2490949
Publication date: 18 May 2006
Published in: Historia Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hm.2004.02.001
History of mathematics in the 18th century (01A50) History of mathematics in the 17th century (01A45)
Related Items (5)
On Liouville Numbers: Yet Another Application of Functional Analysis to Number Theory ⋮ Infinite analytical procedures for the computation of logarithms in works by Benito Bails (1731–1797) ⋮ One String Attached: Geometrical Exactness in Leibniz’s Parisian Manuscripts ⋮ The rectification of quadratures as a central foundational problem for the early Leibnizian calculus ⋮ Introducing differential calculus in Spain: The fluxion of the product and the quadrature of curves by Tomàs Cerdà
Cites Work
- Developing into series and returning from series: A note on the foundations of eighteenth-century analysis
- Unbekannte Studien von Leibniz zur Eliminations- und Explikationstheorie
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