The Teaching and History of Mathematics in the United States, Bände 890-893U.S. Government Printing Office, 1890 - 400 Seiten |
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Seite 21
... lectures at the college for many years . He published several almanacs , to which he appended pious reflections . The ability of making almanacs was then considered proof of profound erudition . A somewhat stronger evidence of the ...
... lectures at the college for many years . He published several almanacs , to which he appended pious reflections . The ability of making almanacs was then considered proof of profound erudition . A somewhat stronger evidence of the ...
Seite 24
... lectures delivered in that metropolis on experimental philosophy and mathematics . In 1727 he entered upon his duties at Harvard . " In scientific attainments Greenwood seems to have been well qualified for his professorship . " He made ...
... lectures delivered in that metropolis on experimental philosophy and mathematics . In 1727 he entered upon his duties at Harvard . " In scientific attainments Greenwood seems to have been well qualified for his professorship . " He made ...
Seite 27
... lectures upon the subject in the college chapel , which the students requested him to publish . The professor put this motto upon the title page : Agite , mortales ! et oculos in spectaculum ver- tite , quod hucusque spectaverunt ...
... lectures upon the subject in the college chapel , which the students requested him to publish . The professor put this motto upon the title page : Agite , mortales ! et oculos in spectaculum ver- tite , quod hucusque spectaverunt ...
Seite 29
... lectures by Rector Pierson , which were a repetition of lectures he had heard while a student at Harvard College . They were metaphysical rather than mathematical , " recognizing the Copernican theory , but knowing nothing of Kepler and ...
... lectures by Rector Pierson , which were a repetition of lectures he had heard while a student at Harvard College . They were metaphysical rather than mathematical , " recognizing the Copernican theory , but knowing nothing of Kepler and ...
Seite 36
... lectures on mathematics , natural philosophy , astronomy , and rhetoric . In 1769 he appears as one of the founders of the American Philosophical So- ciety . The first volume of the transactions of that society contains ac- curate ...
... lectures on mathematics , natural philosophy , astronomy , and rhetoric . In 1769 he appears as one of the founders of the American Philosophical So- ciety . The first volume of the transactions of that society contains ac- curate ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
algebra American analytical geometry application arithmetic astronomy Benjamin Peirce Bowditch chair of mathematics civil engineering classical College conic sections Davies demonstration descriptive geometry Differential and Integral divergent series edition elective elementary Elements English equations Euclid fessor fluxions fractions French Freshman given graduated half-year Harvard High School hours per week infinite series infinitesimal institution instruction instructor Integral Calculus John Journal Junior lectures limits logarithms Loomis's mathe mathematical course mathematical studies mathematical teaching mathematicians mathematics and natural matics method metic Nathaniel Bowditch natural philosophy Newton original exercises Peirce Philadelphia physics plane President principles problems Prof professor of mathematics professorship published pupils pure mathematics quaternions Rittenhouse Robert Adrain rules says scientific Senior solid geometry solution Sophomore spherical trigonometry success surveying taught Teacher of mathematics term text-books theorem theory tion Treatise tutor University Webber West Point William writer Yale Yale College
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 106 - It is with no feeling of pride, as an American, that the remark may be made that, on the comparatively small territorial surface of Europe, there are existing upward of one hundred and thirty of these lighthouses of the skies ; while throughout the whole American hemisphere there is not one.
Seite 43 - I have taken the liberty of sending your Almanac to Monsieur de Condorcet, Secretary of the Academy of Sciences at Paris, and member of the Philanthropic Society; because I considered it a document to which your whole colour had a right for their justification against the doubts which have been entertained of them.
Seite 41 - When we shall have existed as a people as long as the Greeks did before they produced a Homer, the Romans a Virgil, the French a Racine and Voltaire, the English a Shakespeare and Milton, should this reproach be still true, we will enquire from what unfriendly causes it has proceeded...
Seite 12 - The American Instructor, or Young Man's Best Companion, containing Spelling, Reading, Writing, and Arithmetick, in an easier Way than any yet published; and how to qualify any Person for Business, without the Help of a Master.
Seite 41 - As an artist he has exhibited as great a proof of mechanical genius as the world has ever produced. He has not indeed made a world; but he has by imitation approached nearer its Maker than any man who has lived from the creation to this day.
Seite 10 - ... devoted land. When the destined time arrives, he enters upon action, and, as a haughty monarch ascends his throne, the pedagogue mounts his awful great chair, and dispenses right and justice through his whole empire. His obsequious subjects execute the imperial mandates with cheerfulness, and think it their high happiness to be employed in the service of the emperor. Sometimes paper, sometimes his penknife, now birch, now arithmetic, now a ferule, then ABC, then scolding, then flattering, then...
Seite 35 - Besides this, the faculties of the mind, like the members of the body, are strengthened and improved by exercise. Mathematical reasonings and deductions are therefore a fine preparation for investigating the abstruse speculations of the law.
Seite 20 - If so little was done at old Cambridge, then we need not wonder at the fact that new Cambridge failed to be mathematical from the start. The fountain could not rise higher than its source. It was not until the latter half of the seventeenth century that mathematical studies at old Cambridge rose into prominence.
Seite 31 - And I would advise you, my Pupils, to pursue a Regular Course of Academical Studies in some Measure according to the Order of this Catalogue. And in the First Year to Study principally the Tongues, Arithmetic and Algebra; the Second, Logic, Rhetoric and Geometry; the Third, Mathematics and Natural Philosophy; and the Fourth, Ethics and Divinity.
Seite 65 - Astronomy explained upon Sir Isaac Newton's principles, and made easy to those who have not studied Mathematics...