Mengoli's mathematical ideas in Leibniz's excerpts
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Publication:4976286
DOI10.1080/17498430.2016.1239807zbMath1378.01007OpenAlexW2540383834WikidataQ58523871 ScholiaQ58523871MaRDI QIDQ4976286
Publication date: 27 July 2017
Published in: BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2117/98199
Integration of real functions of several variables: length, area, volume (26B15) History of mathematics in the 17th century (01A45) History of real functions (26-03) One-variable calculus (26A06)
Cites Work
- From Cardano's great art to Lagrange's reflections. Filling a gap in the history of algebra
- Symbolic language in early modern mathematics: The algebra of Pierre Hérigone (1580-1643)
- Euler's beta integral in Pietro Mengoli's works
- On the representation of curves in Descartes' geometrie
- Mengoli on ``Quasi proportions
- Leibniz's rigorous foundation of infinitesimal geometry by means of Riemannian sums
- Symbolism, combinations, and visual imagery in the mathematics of Thomas Harriot
- Algebra and geometry in Pietro Mengoli (1625--1686)
- The Role of Indivisibles in Mengoli’s Quadratures
- Leibniz’s Rigorous Foundations of the Method of Indivisibles
- Leibniz as Reader and Second Inventor: The Cases of Barrow and Mengoli
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