The Origins of Cauchy's Rigorous Calculus
| Authors | Grabiner, Judith V. |
| Tags | Mathematics, History & Philosophy |
| Publisher | Dover |
| Published | 01 Jan 2005 |
| Date | 09 May 2013 |
| Languages | eng |
| Identifiers | Amazon.com, google: XuFcx-laQmIC, oclc: 56614238, isbn: 9780486438153 |
| Formats | DJVU, EPUB |
Description
This text for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students examines the events that led to a 19th-century intellectual revolution: the reinterpretation of the calculus undertaken by Augustin-Louis Cauchy and his peers. These intellectuals transformed the uses of calculus from problem-solving methods into a collection of well-defined theorems about limits, continuity, series, derivatives, and integrals. Beginning with a survey of the characteristic 19th-century view of analysis, the book proceeds to an examination of the 18th-century concept of calculus and focuses on the innovative methods of Cauchy and his contemporaries in refining existing methods into the basis of rigorous calculus. 1981 edition.
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