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MacLaurin's Physical Dissertations / by Ian Tweddle
(Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences. ISSN:21968829)
版 | 1st ed. 2007. |
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出版者 | (London : Springer London : Imprint: Springer) |
出版年 | 2007 |
本文言語 | 英語 |
大きさ | VIII, 224 p : online resource |
著者標目 | *Tweddle, Ian author SpringerLink (Online service) |
件 名 | LCSH:Mathematics LCSH:History LCSH:Physics LCSH:Physics -- Philosophy 全ての件名で検索 LCSH:Earth sciences FREE:History of Mathematical Sciences FREE:Applications of Mathematics FREE:Classical and Continuum Physics FREE:Philosophical Foundations of Physics and Astronomy FREE:Earth Sciences |
一般注記 | General Introduction -- General Introduction -- MacLaurin on Gravity -- to Part I -- Translation of MacLaurin’s Dissertation -- MacLaurin on Collisions -- to Part II -- Translation of MacLaurin’s Essay -- MacLaurin on the Tides -- to Part III -- Translation of MacLaurin’s Essay The Scottish mathematician Colin MacLaurin (1698-1746) is best known for developing and extending Newton’s work in calculus, geometry and gravitation; his 2-volume work "Treatise of Fluxions" (1742) was the first systematic exposition of Newton’s methods. It is well known that MacLaurin was awarded prizes by the Royal Academy of Sciences, Paris, for his earlier work on the collision of bodies (1724) and the tides (1740); however, the contents of these essays are less familiar – although some of the material is discussed in the Treatise of Fluxions - and the essays themselves often hard to obtain. This book presents these important works in translation for the first time, preceded by a translation of MacLaurin’s MA dissertation on gravity (Glasgow, 1713) which provides evidence of his early study of Newtonian principles. In his essentially descriptive discussion of gravity MacLaurin ranges over planetary orbits, vortices and theology. His discussion of collisions includes a disputatious account of what should be understood by the force of a moving body, a contentious topic at the time. The essay on the tides has the original version of his celebrated theorem on the equilibrium of a spheroidal fluid mass and employs a remarkable combination of geometry and calculus to determine forces of attraction. The aim is to make this material more generally accessible to researchers and students in mathematics and physics, and indeed to anyone with an interest in the historical development of these subjects. A general introduction puts the works in context and gives an outline of MacLaurin's career. Each translation is then accompanied by an introduction and a series of notes and appendices in which individual results are analysed, both in modern terms and from a historical point of view. Background material is also provided HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84628-776-3 |
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電子ブック | 配架場所 | 資料種別 | 巻 次 | 請求記号 | 状 態 | 予約 | コメント | ISBN | 刷 年 | 利用注記 | 指定図書 | 登録番号 |
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電子ブック | オンライン | 電子ブック |
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Springer eBooks | 9781846287763 |
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電子リソース |
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EB00230307 |
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