Neue Seite 1 Translate this page ben Gerson, Levi (1288 - 1344). gherard von cremona (1114 - 1187). Ghetaldi,Marino (1566 - 1626). Gibbs, Josiah Willard (11.2.1839 - 28.4.1903). 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)
Geometry And Discourse straight. It would seem (if gherard of cremonas translation isright) that the Arabic commentator anNairizi died ca. 922 http://beaugrande.bizland.com/Geometry.htm
Extractions: Zeitschrift für Phonetik, Sprachwissenschaft und Kommunikationsforschung 6, 1991, 771-827; and Journal of the International Institute for Terminology Research Knowledge and discourse in geometry: Intuition, experience, logic Robert de Beaugrande Mathematics is more an activity than a doctrine. Luitzen Egbert Brouwer Geometry is at the same time a science and an art, mathematics and philosophy. James Edgar Thompson Mathematics is often a lonely, impersonal experience of manipulating symbols in accordance with rules learned by rote. Pamela McCorduck 1. The trees and the forest 1.1 The familiar aphorism about the trees obscuring the forest seems nowhere more apt than in the domain of public education. Both theory and practice are intensely preoccupied with the specific content and materials of the respective instructional domains. Educators readily take it for granted that schooling should dwell on the time-honoured offerings, such as native language, foreign language, history, chemistry, biology, algebra, and geometry; the main question is how these subjects can be taught and learned most efficiently, not whether or why. If these subjects are the trees, then the forest is the higher-level cognitive development of the child, the overall complex of processes and consequences of knowledge acquisition during education. 1.2 Fragmentation of perspective also pervades the standard approaches to these individual subjects. Each one is not only isolated from the rest, but is broken down into incidental lessons, facts, and quizzes. The ensuing mosaic of specific question/answer or problem/solution episodes creates a rather specious format of organisation. A more genuine format would reflect a comprehensive assessment of the contribution of any given episode to the learners development. Such an assessment could establish reliable, integrative criteria for designing a curriculum, and for deciding what should be taught in which grade and how.
Dientzenhofer Gymnasium Translate this page 1555) Gentzen, Gerhard (1909 - 1945) Gergonne, Joseph Diaz (1771 - 1831) Germain,Sophie (1776 - 1831) gherard von cremona (1114 - 1187) Ghetaldi, Marino (1566 http://www.dg.bnv-bamberg.de/seiten/faecher/mathe/seiten/person/person.htm
Extractions: 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)
Translators Of Scientific Knowledge In The Middle Ages different subjects. He was born in 1114 in cremona, Italy. He Andalusia).Gerard's name is sometimes written as gherard. Among his http://cyberistan.org/islamic/Introl3.html
Extractions: By the tenth century, the intellectual superiority of the Arabs (Muslims) was recognized in Europe. The first Christian to take up the torch of learning was Pope Sylvester II (Gerbert, d. 1003 AD). He introduced the Arab astronomy and mathematics, and Arabic numerals in place of the clumsy Roman ones. He was followed by many, especially Constantinus Africanus in the eleventh century, and Bishop Raymond (Raimundo) in the twelfth century. As early as eleventh century Toledo became a center for the transmission of Arabic (Islamic) culture and science to Europe. A number of translators flourished there. Among the scholars, who flocked to it from all over Europe, were Gerard of Cremona (1117- 1187) and John of Seville. Other famous translators were Adelard of Bath, Robert of Chester, Michael Scot, Stephenson of Saragossa, William of Lunis and Philip of Tripoli. The early translations were primarily into Latin and some into Hebrew. Subsequent translations were done from Latin or Hebrew into vernacular languages of Europe. Many translators at Toledo had neither command over the Arabic language nor sufficient knowledge of the subject matter.
Mathematicians Born In Italy Translate this page Cataldi Cavalieri Cesaro Giovanni Ceva Tommaso Ceva Codazzi cremona D'Ovidio FrancescaFrattini Frisi Fubini Galileo Gallarati Genocchi gherard Grandi Guarini http://www.archimedes-lab.org/borninItaly.html
Lebensdaten Von Mathematikern Translate this page 1945) Gergonne, Joseph Diaz (1771 - 1831) Germain, Sophie (1776 - 1831) ben Gerson,Levi (1288 - 1344) gherard von cremona (1114 - 1187) Ghetaldi, Marino (1566 http://agora.unige.ch/sfib/bl/handr/h07_pythagoras/pytagoras/html/geschichte/leb
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)
Information Und Kommunikation In Geschichte Und Gegenwart Translate this page der Niederlande war Utrecht, wo 1473 Nikolaus Ketelaer und gherard Leempt zu der päpstlichenBibliothek Bartolomeo Sacchi (* Piadena bei cremona 1421, Rom http://www.ib.hu-berlin.de/~wumsta/infopub/textbook/umfeld/rehm3.html
Full Chronological Index 10751160) Adelard (1092-1167) Ezra (1100-1160) Aflah (1114-1185) Bhaskara (1114-1187)gherard (1130-1180) al (1830-1891) Hirst (1830-1903) cremona (1831-1907 http://alas.matf.bg.ac.yu/~mm97106/math/chronlist.htm
Index Of /~history/Mathematicians Crank.html 04Feb-2003 1501 6.6K Crelle.html 20-Jan-2003 1752 12K cremona.html20 html 20-Jan-2003 1752 12K Germain.html 20-Jan-2003 1752 14K gherard.html 20 http://www.gap-system.org/~history/Mathematicians/
CERCO CERCO PORTAPACCHI NONFANGO PER BORSE RIGIDE PER RC24 Nome Translate this page 15/05/02, NumTel. Oppure E-Mail gherard@infinito.it, VENDO, GIUBBOTTODAINESE MOD. Nome SERGIO Zona o Citta' cremona, 11/05/02, NumTel. http://www.vfritaliaclub.it/VNC/VIC_VENDCOMP.htm
Extractions: CERCO CERCO PORTAPACCHI NONFANGO PER BORSE RIGIDE PER RC24 Nome : BIBO Zona o Citta' : RIETI NumTel. : 3487495490 Oppure : E-Mail : vueffeerre@iol.it VENDO VENDO VFR 800 COLORE ROSSO DEL 1999 KM.13000.MOTO PERFETTA. Nome : ANTONIO Zona o Citta' : PESARO NumTel. : 3383195230 Oppure : fax.0721909574 E-Mail : doni.sal@libero.it VENDO VENDO VFR 800 COLORE ROSSO DEL 1999 KM.13000.MOTO PERFETTA. Nome : ANTONIO Zona o Citta' : PESARO NumTel. : 3383195230 Oppure : fax.0721909574 E-Mail : doni.sal@libero.it VENDO VENDO MARMITTA IN TITANIO LEOVINCI CON 500KM PER VFRC PERFETTA UNIPRO 165 EURO TRATTABILI GIGI Nome : GIGI YELLOWPOWER Zona o Citta' : ROMA NumTel. : 06-8541723 Oppure : E-Mail : gigimistretta@hotmail.com VENDO VENDO COMPLETO GIVI WINGRACK CON BORSE LATERALI DA 46LT E BAULETTO MAXIA NUOVO Nome : MARCO Zona o Citta' : VERONA NumTel. : 3355752642 Oppure : E-Mail : trial62@yahoo.it CERCO CERCO KIT BORSE RIGIDE NONFANGO PER VFR 86-87 Nome : BIBO Zona o Citta' : RIETI NumTel. : 3487495490 Oppure : E-Mail : vueffeerre@iol.it VENDO MOLLE FORCELLA WP 4 MILA KM. 100 EURO VENDO
Untitled Document Curtze has reproduced, in the preface to his edition of the translation by Gherardof cremona of anNairizi's Arabic commentary on Euclid, some interesting http://www.headmap.com/book/euclid/before/princ-trans.htm
Extractions: [p. 91] Cicero is the first Latin author to mention Euclid ; but it is not likely that in Cicero's time Euclid had been translated into Latin or was studied to any considerable extent by the Romans; for, as Cicero says in another place , while geometry was held in high honour among the Greeks, so that nothing was more brilliant than their mathematicians, the Romans limited its scope by having regard only to its utility for measurements and calculations. How very little theoretical geometry satisfied the Roman agrimensores is evidenced by the work of Balbus de mensuris , where some of the definitions of Eucl. Book I. are given. Again, the extracts from the Elements found in the fragment attributed to Censorinus (fl. 238 A.D) are confined to the definitions, postulates, and common notions. But by degrees the Elements passed even among the Romans into the curriculum of a liberal education; for Martianus Capella speaks of the effect of the enunciation of the proposition âhow to construct an equilateral triangle on a given straight lineâ among a company of philosophers, who, recognising the first proposition of the Elements , straightway break out into encomiums on Euclid . But the
Untitled Document The Latin translation of this tract from the Arabic was probably made by Gherardof cremona (11141187), among the list of whose numerous translations a http://www.headmap.com/book/euclid/before/o-works.htm
Extractions: [p. 7] In giving a list of the Euclidean treatises other than the Elements , I shall be brief: for fuller accounts of them, or speculations with regard to them, reference should be made to the standard histories of mathematics I will take first the works which are mentioned by Greek authors. I. The Pseudaria I mention this first because Proclus refers to it in the general remarks in praise of the Elements which he gives immediately after the mention of Euclid in his summary. He says The book is considered to be irreparably lost. We may conclude however from the connexion of it with the Elements and the reference to its usefulness for beginners that it did not go outside the domain of elementary geometry [p. 8] The Data The Data (dedomena) are included by Pappus in the Treasury of Analysis (topos analuomenos), and he describes their contents They are still concerned with elementary geometry, though forming part of the introduction to higher analysis. Their form is that of propositions proving that, if certain things in a figure are given (in magnitude, in species, etc.), something else is given. The subjectmatter is much the same as that of the planimetrical books of the Elements , to which the Data are often supplementary. We shall see this later when we come to compare the propositions in the
Astronomie Um 1200 Translate this page Astronomie um 1200. In der Astronomie herrschte zu jener Zeit in Mitteleuropawissenschaftlicher Stillstand. Seit Jahrhunderten hatte http://www.gymnasium-zwettl.ac.at/projekte/wissen1200/astronomie/astro.htm