Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Mathematicians - English Mathematicians
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

         English Mathematicians:     more books (19)
  1. Extensive English COurse for Mathematicians
  2. English mathematicians (Mathematical memoirs) by Herbert Janson, 1997
  3. Chinese-English Glossary of the Mathematical Sciences by John DeFrancis, 1964
  4. John Arbuthnot,: Mathematician and satirist, (Harvard studies in English) by Lester M Beattie, 1935
  5. Proceedings of the International Congress of MathematiciansMoscow, 1966.[Text varies- Russian, English, French & German] by I G Petrovsky, 1968
  6. The French Mathematician by Tom Petsinis, 1998-12
  7. Meditationes Algebraicae: An English Translation of the Work of Edward Waring by Edward Waring, 1991-11
  8. Report on the papers of William Whewell, D.D., F.R.S., 1794-1866: Mathematician and master of Trinity College, Cambridge by Patricia Bradford, 1973
  9. Handbook for spoken mathematics: (Larry's speakeasy) by Lawrence A Chang, 1983
  10. The Lancashire geometers and their writings by Thomas Turner Wilkinson, 1854
  11. The mathematical practitioners of Tudor & Stuart England by E. G. R Taylor, 1985
  12. Discoveries: Lewis Carroll in Wonderland (Discoveries (Abrams)) by Stephanie Lovett Stoffel, 1997-02-01
  13. Lewis Carroll: A Portrait With Background by Donald Serrell Thomas, 1997-07
  14. Leaning Towards Infinity: How My Mother's Apron Unfolds into My Life by Sue Woolfe, 1997-03

41. Longitude2
and 1707 there were a number of incidents in which english naval ships Everyone believedthat mathematicians and astronomers would provide the solution but it
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/Longitude2.html

42. Mathematics Education In The Public Sphere
out to be one of the greatest of nineteenthcentury mathematicians, and who made isdue to Jefferson’s policy of importing the best english-speaking scholars
http://www.math.virginia.edu/Jefferson/jeff_r(7).htm
Mathematics Education in the Public Sphere In relation to American mathematics education in the wider sphere, we see Jefferson’s promotion of mathematics as a matter of public policy in two important educational institutions whose spirits breathe a Jeffersonian world-view. It was during Jefferson’s presidency that the United States Military Academy was established at West Point—it formally opened on July 4th 1802—and it is felt that Jefferson’s influence played a part in its coming to develop such a strong mathematical cast. Even though it took some time to find its feet and it wasn’t until after 1817 that West Point began to establish its reputation as a major powerhouse of mathematical instruction, such a conception was in Jefferson’s mind from the 1790s (as seen in a letter of November 23rd, 1799). The other major and equally influential educational institution which Jefferson created, at every level from site and architecture to syllabus and appointments, is, of course, the University of Virginia, in its conception the most enlightened and liberal college of the New World. In his plans for this institution mathematics had a more prominent place than at most American colleges of the period. Another feature is his sending back to Europe for teachers. This was not uncontroversial, but Jefferson was surely right that that is what the country needed: it hadn’t yet a critical mass of scholars to be self-sustaining in teaching, let alone research, at the level to which Jefferson was aiming.

43. Simone Weil --  Encyclopædia Britannica
, Wiles, Andrew (born 1953), english mathematician. In June 1993in England, at a small conference of mathematicians at the Isaac
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=78468&tocid=0&query=oppression&ct=

44. How I Learned English (successful English Learner Story) - Apronus.com
Over a year ago I decided to use english only in mathematical notes. I read andwrite math materials in english, like most professional mathematicians.
http://www.apronus.com/learn_english/mrw_story.htm
Apronus Home Language Learn English
How I learned English (I wrote this story in 2001.) My full name is Michal Ryszard Wojcik. I live in Poland and Polish is my native language. I am a mathematician and an enthusiast of English. I learned English very well and now I want to share my experience with other people. I had my first contact with English when I was six. My dad inspired me to listen to The Beatles. I listened to them every day for the next seven years. In the beginning I could understand nothing of what they were singing. But soon I started to understand individual words, especially the ones which appeared in the titles. Later I got a book with the words of all the songs. I read the book many times. I learned many songs by heart. I sang the songs to myself. Still, I understood very little of the meaning. It became my dream to learn English so well that I could understand The Beatles. So The Beatles were my first motivation. That is how I started my way toward English. Today, I can understand The Beatles very clearly. Each time I hear a Beatles song, I am delighted and proud because I have made my childhood dream come true. I listen to many rock bands, all in English, and I listen every day, sometimes for over seven hours a day. I am constantly aware of my success with English because I can understand the lyrics of the songs I listen to. And that gives me pleasure and satisfaction for many hours every day. When I was 13 years old, I started reading science fiction books. I read in Polish. The books were all American. I could not read the original versions because I did not know English so well. As I read in Polish, I was more and more eager to read the books in English. Somehow I felt that in English the books will be even more interesting and reading will be more exciting. I finally decided that I wanted to read books in English. This decision guided me for many years.

45. Contents
PASCAL TRIANGLE. Contents Mathematical Connections Throughout history, TheGolden Ratio has fascinated mathematicians and artists for centuries.
http://milan.milanovic.org/math/english/contents.html
Welcome to WWW site Rasko Jovanovic`s World of mathematics
Search WWW Search milan.milanovic.org
PASCAL TRIANGLE
Contents:
Mathematical Connections This web page gathers a host of facts and figures about mathematical topics such as Pascal's triangle, Fibonacci numbers, and the Lucas Numbers, as well as the connections between the concepts....
Pascal Triangle

Fibonacci numbers and the Pascal Triangle
Blaise Pascal Blaise Pascal was born at Clermont on June,19,1623. In 1653 Pascal invented the arithmetical triangle.Pascal`s arithmetical triangle is the basic number formula in nature. As a mathematician Pascal is best known in connection with his correspondence with Fermat in 1654. in which he laid down the principles of the theory of probabilities. He died in Paris on August 19, 1662... Formulae for Fib(x-n) and Fib(x+2n) It is possible to derive operator`s equations for Fibonacci numbers . There are systems of equations where all the coefficients are the numbers of the Pascal Triangle ... Now available in PDF format for which you will need the ACROBAT READER .
Simple exercises in the operational calculus

The formulas in the present paper are all simple exercises in the operational calculus ( once one knows it ). Formula involving a product of Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers:

46. English For Mathematicians & Computer Scientists
The summary for this Bulgarian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.books.bg/book.php?ISBN=9548495112

47. For Bio-mathematicians: Earthly Technologies Of Extraterrestrial Visitors - PRAV
Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you! For biomathematicians earthlytechnologies of extraterrestrial visitors. 01/05/2004 0703.
http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/378/11699_genes.html
var zflag_nid="305"; var zflag_cid="98/1"; var zflag_sid="56"; var zflag_width="1"; var zflag_height="1"; var zflag_sz="15"; Last updated: 01/05/04 07:03 MSK Latest news Prepare for new surprises at a new Harry Potter film
The once in 122 year event to amaze earthlings

School kids to undertake the Mars project

Parents ignore children's obesity issues
...
More>>
Latest PRAVDA.Ru Forum Topics Fire threatens Reagans's ranch and 2 refineries
Attack on US soldiers Iraq.Pics.4 killed.

"US Frisbee Terrorists": selling frisbees that explode in children's faces

BangladesherDak Newsletter for Saturday, June 05, 2004 Issue: 220
... Services Search
Search internet

Search pravda.ru
Subscribe Lists at Felist.Com Comments From PRAVDA.Ru
Information Partners Fark.Com Christian Science Monitor Statistic Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you! For bio-mathematicians: earthly technologies of extraterrestrial visitors This paper resulted from the search of possible earthly technologies of visitors from other planets in case if their visiting the Earth took place. Professor of music David Huron from the University of Ohio believes that music may be an evolutional device, similar to straight walking and speech, and which allowed human beings to passed through the whole period of evolution (according to Darwin). He and his adherents stand up for the viewpoint based on music"s biological roots and state that music had appeared along with Homo sapiens long before people spread around the entire Earth, and it happened about 40 thousand years ago. According to the professor, this theory has been proved by archeological excavations.

48. Mathe Ist TOP; ENGLISH
in alphabetical order Prof. Dr. T. Gardiner (University of Birmingham, GB) Passingon the torch What mathematicians have to contribute to the next generation
http://www.uni-duisburg.de/FB11/MIT/Mathe_ist_TOP_en.html
Mathe ist TOP
FACHBEREICH MATHEMATIK
Gerhard-Mercator-Universität Duisburg
German Homepage
Adressees Main Goals Participation Fees ... Contact Persons and Registration
Mathe ist TOP
DMV-Initiative Congress
On the advancement of gifted and highly motivated students
as part of the
World Mathematical Year 2000
(WMY 2000) Gerhard Mercator University of Duisburg
September 25 - 27, 2000
  • In co-operation with
    • The Society for Didactics of Mathematics (GDM)
    • Deutscher Verein zur Förderung des mathematischen und naturwissenschaftlichen Unterrichts e.V. (MNU)
  • With support from
    • The Ministry for School and Continuing Education, Science and Research of Northrhine-Westphalia
    • The Federal Ministry for Education and Research
    • Siemens Inc., Munich
    • Munich Reinsurance Group, Inc.
    • Gerhard Mercator University of Duisburg
    and other institutions
Addressees
The Congress is directed at those in the following research fields:
  • The advancement of mathematical talent
  • Mathematics competitions
  • Making mathematics accessible for gifted students
In addition, the congress will be offered to all those active in developing or evolving proposals in these fields, in the university as well as in school and extracurricular contexts. Furthermore, the congress would like to place added emphasis on the decisive interface between school and university.

49. UBM - Main Page (English)
All papers have to be sent to the office of the Union of Bulgarian mathematicians(UBM) till 3. The papers should be written in Bulgarian or in english.
http://www.math.bas.bg/~smb/conf03_e.html
Union of Bulgarian Mathematicians
Union of Bulgarian Mathematicians
Akad.G.Bonchev Str., bl.8
1113 Sofia, BULGARIA Phone: (359 2) 72 11 89, 73 80 76
E-mail: smb@math.bas.bg This page in Bulgarian 32nd SPRING CONFERENCE April, 2003 THE 32nd SPRING CONFERENCE OF THE UNION OF BULGARIAN MATHEMATICIANS will take place at the beginning of April, 2003. The Conference program will include papers considering research in the field of mathematics and computer science as well as teaching methods in these fields. All papers have to be sent to the office of the Union of Bulgarian Mathematicians (UBM) till November 15 th , 2002. The accepted papers will be included in the Conference Proceedings. More information about the conference (the structure of the scientific program, the dates and place of the conference, etc.) will be included in the Second Announcement. Paper Format and Submission 1. The results presented in the papers should not be published before.
2. The text should be typeset in Latex or Word, up to 6 pages. Please, use the following page margins: 135 mm X 194 mm and font size 10 pt.

50. Canadian Math Links - Educational Science Content - Biology Chemistry Physics Ma
The site is available in english, French, Ukrainian and Georgian. of knowledgeof interest to most professional and amateur mathematicians, ranging from
http://www.livinggraphs.com/enu/resources/cmsl/math.shtml
Deutsch English Italiano
Canadian Math Links
Do you know of a Canadian math web site that we have missed? If so, please send the web address and any other details to the webmaster
If your site is listed here, please link back to us . You can use our web button to make the connection!
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Canadian Mathematical Society (CMS) Bilingual
http://camel.math.ca/

"The goal of the Canadian Mathematical Society is to promote and advance the discovery, learning and application of mathematics." This web site offers information on various topics, including journals, meetings, math camps and competitions.
Canadian Mathematics Competition (CMC) Bilingual
http://cmc.uwaterloo.ca/

The CMC is an "activity of the Centre for Education in Mathematics and Computing at the Faculty of Mathematics , University of Waterloo." This web site provides details on how to enter the math competition. The site is for students with an interest in both theoretical and applied math, including computer science. Canadian Mathematics Education Study Group (CMESG) Bilingual http://ace.acadiau.ca/~dreid/cmesg.html

51. JobFutures.ca - Mathematicians, Systems Analysts And Computer Programmers (NOC 2
To be a mathematician or statistician, you need a graduate degree in mathematicsor statistics. Math. Physics. Computerrelated courses. english.
http://jobfutures.ca/noc/216p2.shtml
Alphabet Interest NOC Code Work Prospects ...
print entire profile

Mathematicians, Systems Analysts and Computer Programmers (NOC 216)
What You Need
Educational Programs Useful Experience Useful High School Subjects
What You Need
In general, you need a university degree in your chosen field of work or a college program in computer science.
To be a mathematician or statistician, you need a graduate degree in mathematics or statistics.
To be an actuary , you usually need a university degree or college diploma in mathematics, statistics or operations research, three years' actuarial experience, and accreditation with the Canadian Institute of Actuaries.
To be a computer analyst or programmer , you usually need a university degree or college program in computer science.
Most recent entrants have an undergraduate university degree, and almost 1 in 10 has a graduate degree.
Required/Related Educational Programs* Computer Science (C720) Computer Science (U720) Mathematics (U740) Electrical Engineering (U360) ... Computer Science (M720) These educational programs are listed in the order in which they are most likely to supply graduates to this occupation. Useful Experience/Skills Project management Team project work Proposal writing Making presentations Financial management Business operations Useful High School Subjects Math Physics Computer-related courses English This page last modified on: 2003-04-24 Important Notices Contact Us Help Search ... Want to Immigrate?

52. Polish Mathematical Society, Cracow Division
Wersja z ogonkami Wersja bez ogonków POLISH MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY CRACOWDIVISION. XV Polish Congress of mathematicians 1999. CONTACT DETAILS ul.
http://sigma.im.uj.edu.pl/~ptm/english/index3.html
P OLISH M ATHEMATICAL S OCIETY C RACOW D IVISION Council, Committees, Delegates
Members of PMS, CD

Membership of PMS, CD
(only in Polish)
Report of the Plenary Meeting in 1999
Dvi - file in Polish)
Monument of Stefan Banach
(only in Polish)
Current events
(State: 20.11.1999) (only in Polish)
Cracow Mathematical Departments and Chairs

XV Polish Congress of Mathematicians 1999
CONTACT DETAILS:
ul. Reymonta 4, PL-30-059 Cracow
ptm@im.uj.edu.pl
Creation's date: July 18, 1998
Last changes: November 20, 1999 Conception: Beata Szemberg Person in charge: Beata Szemberg This page is hosted by Institute of Mathematics UJ

53. Serials And Journals Database
Society of mathematicians and Physicists of Montenegro, Podgorica; Departmentof Mathematics of the university of Montenegro, Podgorica. english, Russian
http://www.zblmath.fiz-karlsruhe.de/MATH/serials/zbl/journals/all/m/dir?query_st

54. Mathematics Research Section Of The Union Of Czech Mathematicians And Physicists
Czech Mathematical Institutes and Departments (in Czech); Math conferences in theCzech Job page (mixed Czech/english); Journals and preprint series published in
http://mvs.jcmf.cz/index.html.en
Mathematics Research Section
of the Union of Czech Mathematicians and Physicists
About Mathematics Research Section News and useful information Other links

55. English For Mathematicians & Computer Scientists ñ àâòîð Êîðíåëèÿ
The summary for this Bulgarian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.bgbook.dir.bg/book.php3?ID=8842

56. D·Drive: Federated World Directory Of Mathematicians
Potential Groups. American Mathematical Society Membership page. Languageenglish. Canadian Mathematical Society Membership page. Language english.
http://www.cs.dal.ca/ddrive/fwdm/index.shtml
CECM SFU CoLab WestGrid Faculty of Computer Science ... IRMACS FWDM Home News Seminars Research Team ... Contact Us
Federated World Directory of Mathematicians
Federated searching is a system that provides a common user interface for searching and retrieving information across heterogeneous datasets over the Internet. Preamble In 1998 the CEIC was asked to explore the feasibility of an electronic World Directory of Mathematicians to replace the traditional hard copy. The CEIC concluded that intellectual property and privacy issues in different countries made this, while desirable, impossible for the 2002 edition of the WDM. With the emergence of better Internet search tools, we now believe it is realistic to build a federated directory, as defined above. What this provides is a rapid and simple search over existing online databases with no additional work for the user. Current Directory Potential Groups
  • American Mathematical Society
  • Membership page Language: English One can search for a member by filling out any of the following fields: last name, first name, position, state (U.S.), country, member organization, institution, institution city, institution state/province and institution country. Member organization is selected by using check box. Position, state, country, institution state/province and institution country fields use the drop-down menu. Institution state/province lists US states as well as Canadian provinces. When the result is returned, it lists the address of the institution where the member works in addition to name. As well, it lists home and office phone numbers, fax number, email address, homepage url, organizations the member belongs to, and the member's specialties.

57. Mathematical Physics. Books On Science. On-line Bookstore.
International Congress of mathematicians. August 2129, 1990, Kyoto, Japan. V.2.Information / Order Add to Shopping cart The author s association. (english).
http://urss.ru/cgi-bin/db.pl?cp=&lang=en&blang=en&list=37&page=Catalog

58. §1. Cambridge Mathematicians. VIII. The Literature Of Science. Vol. 14. The Vic
The Cambridge History of english and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21).Volume XIV. The Literature of Science. § 1. Cambridge mathematicians.
http://www.bartleby.com/224/0801.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History The Victorian Age, Part Two The Literature of Science ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two.

59. Mathematicians Who Forget The Mistakes Of History (A.L.I.C.E. AI Foundation)
Davis tells the incredible story of this hardscrabble english schoolmaster who transformed samefooting as algebra and calculus by applying mathematical symbols
http://www.alicebot.org/articles/wallace/mathematicians.html
Promoting the adoption and development of Alicebot and AIML free software
Mathematicians who forget the mistakes of history
Dr. Richard S. Wallace
a review of
Engines of Logic
by Martin Davis
Norton, 2001 (Paperback, 257 pages)
Martin Davis, one of the greatest living mathematicians and computer scientists, and one of the few academics supportive of my disability claim against NYU, has written a remarkable book. Taking a page from Turing's biographer, Andrew Hodges, another professional mathematician, Davis plunges into the most nonmathematical of subjects: history. When I last saw Martin Davis at NYU in 1995, he told me was working on a book about the history of logic. Around the same time, I attended a talk Davis gave at the New York Academy of Sciences. The subject was "Leibniz's Dream", also the title of this book's first chapter. Engines of Logic , originally published in hardcover under the title The Universal Machine , is the culmination of those efforts. Only one degree of separation takes us from Martin Davis to the generation of Einstein, Gödel, Turing, Mauchly, Eckert, Atanasoff, von Neumann, Church, Post and Ulam, many of whom the author met or knew personally. Martin Davis is both living history as well as writing it. He is the link between that generation and those of us working today on logic, artificial intelligence and "thinking machines." If you want to know why predicates are called "predicates" in AIML, and not "properties" or "variables", read this book. The story begins with Leibniz, who, along with Newton, invented the calculus. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz also had a dream, as Davis puts it, "He dreamt of an encyclopedic compilation, of a universal artificial mathematical language in which each facet of knowledge could be expressed, of calculational rules which would reveal all the logical interrelationships among these propositions. Finally, he dreamed of machines capable of carrying out calculations, freeing the mind for creative thought". This was around 1680 in Germany.

60. Mathematics - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
A mathematical thesaurus maintained by the NRICH project at the University of Cambridge(UK), Connecting Mathematics; english part is still under construction.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematics
Mathematics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Mathematics is commonly defined as the study of patterns of structure, change , and space ; more informally, one might say it is the study of 'figures and numbers'. In the formalist view, it is the investigation of axiomatically defined abstract structures using logic and mathematical notation ; other views are described in Philosophy of mathematics . Mathematics might be seen as a simple extension of spoken and written languages, with an extremely precisely defined vocabulary and grammar, for the purpose of describing and exploring physical and conceptual relationships. The specific structures that are investigated by mathematicians often have their origin in the natural sciences , most commonly in physics , but mathematicians also define and investigate structures for reasons purely internal to mathematics, because the structures may provide, for instance, a unifying generalization for several subfields, or a helpful tool for common calculations. Finally, many mathematicians study the areas they do for purely aesthetic reasons, viewing mathematics as an art form rather than as a practical or applied science . Some mathematicians like to refer to their subject as "the Queen of Sciences". Mathematics is often abbreviated to math (in American English ) or maths (in British English Table of contents 1 Overview and history of mathematics
2 Topics in mathematics

2.1 Quantity

Page 3     41-60 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter