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  1. Proceedings of the International Congress of MathematiciansMoscow, 1966.[Text varies- Russian, English, French & German] by I G Petrovsky, 1968
  2. Emil J. Gumbel: Weimar German Pacifist and Professor (Studies in Central European Histories) (Studies in Central European Histories) by Arthur D. Brenner, 2002-02-01
  3. Recent Developments In Stochastic Analysis And Related Topics: Beijing, China 29 August - 3 September 2002 by Sino-german Conference on Stochastic Ana, Sergio Albeverio, et all 2005-01
  4. Sad Strains of a Gay Waltz: A Novel by Irene Dische, 1997-07
  5. Measuring the World: A Novel (Unabridged) by Daniel Kehlmann,
  6. The Company of Strangers by Robert Wilson, 2001-10-19

81. Untitled
one of the interesting sites in mathematics gateways/webdirectories which providesinformation on Searchable index for german mathematical resources; Fulltext
http://144.16.72.189/is213/213-2000-2001/assignments/gate-mathematics-shubha.htm
SEARCHING INFORMATION ON INTERNET INTERNET GATEWAYS AND SUBJECT DIRECTORIES IN MATHEMATICS SHUBHA.P
Introduction:
Subject gateways are subject specific search engines on the internet. They allow users to search for information on a particular topic. Subject gateways provides well organised, annotated links to a wide range of high quality information selected for its potential use. Subject gateways also called as subject index gateways, virtual libraries, clearing houses, subject trees and pathfinders. these are highly developed and large databeses that specialise in particular subject areas. Subject gateways tend to be developed by experts or expert organisations in the subject areas and aim to help the user locate high quality, core internet resources. Subject gateways is special since they exercise greater discrimination in indexing of web pages, and do not include personal home pages and web sites that are considered to be of little or no academic value. European Mathematical Information System Maths-net: internet information services for mathematicians MathSciNet:Mathematical reviews on the web MathSearch:Mathematics on the Internet ... Mathematics WWW virtual Library
European Mathematical Information System
This contains information on almost all the topic of mathematics. The categories like general information, related topics, mathematics web servers, Math-Net Newsletter and Archive, Societies and Associations,Institutes and Centers, Commercial Pages, Mathematics Journals, Mathematics reprints, Subject Area Pages, Other Archived Materials, Mathematics Software etc for more information visit there website.

82. Tensen Physics Dictionary (biographies)
Carl Friedrich Gauss (17771855) was a german mathematician who, with Weber, publisheda treatise in 1833 describing the measurement of the earth s magnetic
http://www.mcm.edu/~christej/dictionary/bib.html
A B C D ... Z Niels Henrik Abel ) was a Norwegian mathematician. ( pg.703) Andre Marie Ampere ) was a French mathematician, chemist, and physicist who experimentally quantified the relationship between the electrical current and the magnetic field . His works were summarized in a treatise published in , The units of electrical current are named after him. ( pg.5) The Bernoulli Family consisted of nine Swiss mathematicians in three generations. The father, Johan , lived from to Daniel has been called the "Father of Mathematical Physics." All were followers of Leibniz Charles A. Coulomb ) was a French engineer and physicist who published the laws of electrostatics in seven memoirs to the French Academy of Science between and . His name is associated with the units of electrical charge pg.5) ) was a French mathematician who "fathered" modern mathematics." ( Pierre de Fermat ) was a French lawyer, linguist and amateur mathematician who extended ideas about algebra and contributed to optics with his "Principle of Least Time." ( Leonard Euler ) (rhymes with boiler not ruler ) was probably the most prolific mathematician (student of Johan Bernoulli , friend of Daniel Bernoulli ) of all time, known for the quality of his vast works. (

83. Launching The Math-Net Page
of the MathNet project in germany that aimed at the creation of a distributedinformation and communication system for the german mathematical community.
http://www.math-net.org/launching-Math-Net.html
Launching the Math-Net Page
IMU’s activities on electronic information and communication
One major aim of the International Mathematical Union (IMU) in the field of information and communication is to improve the worldwide access to mathematical information for the mathematical community and, generally, for everybody interested in mathematics. For that reason, the IMU established its Committee on Electronic Information and Communication (CEIC) in 1998. The activities of CEIC comprise all aspects of electronic information and communication in mathematics. Math-Net Pages are an instrument to make the information of mathematical institutions electronically available in a well-structured way. Additional Math-Net Services facilitate search and access. The IMU invites all institutions to join the Math-Net activities and to install Math-Net Pages.
The history of the Math-Net Page
The concept of Math-Net Pages evolved in the framework of the Math-Net project in Germany that aimed at the creation of a distributed information and communication system for the German mathematical community. This project focussed on:
  • the development of a human infrastructure (appointment of information coordinators at all participating institutions) recommendations for the institutions to structure their local Web sites (which resulted in the initial concept of the Math-Net Page) building up of services (such as MPRESS for preprints

84. Niels Henrik Abel A Short But Influential Life
Abel never visited the important german mathematician Gauss in Göttingen, insteadhe travelled with his companions to Freiburg, Dresden, Prague, Vienna, Graz
http://www.apollon.uio.no/apollon-english-96/a13.html
Niels Henrik Abel:
A short but influential life
The only existing authentic portrait of Niels Henrik Abel Norway's best known mathematician, Niels Henrik Abel, died at the age of 26. Despite his short life, he contributed a great deal to his subject and his name is inextricably linked with the world of mathematics. At the age of 13, he moved from Gjerstad in southeast Norway to Christiania [presentday Oslo] and started at the Cathedral School. Excelling in mathematics, he scraped through in the other subjects, showing every sign of being fed up with school. Berlin and beyond Most important work mislaid He arrived in Paris in July 1826, but the stay there was a disappointment. France's most important mathematicians showed little or no interest in meeting this unknown Norwegian. Nevertheless, his time there proved very productive and he wrote a piece on algebraic integrals which was later to be recognised as his masterpiece. In order to be accepted and printed, it had to be assessed by mathematicians at the French Academy of Sciences. Abel waited the entire autumn, but his piece was mislaid. It was not printed until 15 years later, after considerable pressure from the Norwegian government. The person responsible for printing it then stole the manuscript, which remained lost until 1952 when it resurfaced in Florence! The New Year of 1827 saw Abel returning to Crelle in Berlin and then on to Norway in May. In addition to his mathematical work, he took home some continental habits. His friends and colleagues noticed that his clothes were more modern and that he had "learnt some manners".

85. MATHEMATICAL OBJECTIVITY AND THE RIGHT OF INITIATIVE (10-Sep-1999)
Already at the beginning of the 18th century, the german mathematician and philosopherGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz aspired to achieving objectivity in human
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/future/objectivity.html
MATHEMATICAL OBJECTIVITY AND THE POWER OF INITIATIVE
Already at the beginning of the 18th century, the German mathematician and philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz aspired to achieving objectivity in human affairs by logic and computation. Today we are somewhat closer to achieving Leibniz's dream when he wrote: ... when controversies arise, it will not be a work of learned disputation between two philosophers, but between two computists. It will be enough for them to take pen in hand, sit at the abacus, and say to each other, as friends: ``Let us calculate!'' We begin with the problem of initiating change.
Who has the right of initiative?
Everyone has the experience of thinking some government policy, business policy, school policy or social custom is wrong and ought to be changed and feeling frustrated by his inability to communicate his objections or even to learn what the rationale of the policy is or who is in charge. Even if the people responsible for the policy are nominally reachable, if the office is high, they have hundreds of letters or emails proposing change. Often the person who can be reached hasn't the power, and the people with the power are responsible for too many policies to pay attention. In many matters no one person has the power of initiative. In matters of social custom, no group, not even Congress, can initiate changes. We can describe this situation by saying that only certain positions in social organization give a person the power of initiative

86. SCHEMAS Registry: Activity Reports (ordered By Sector)
in its database collected from 132 Internet server(s). MathNet is governed by a steeringcommittee and related committees of the german Mathematical Union (DMV
http://www.schemas-forum.org/registry/desire/activityreports.php3?field=filename

87. Science Jokes:1. MATHEMATICS : 1.5 MATHEMATICS QUOTES
1992, p. 177. Karl F. Gauss (17771855), german mathematician toreach them! Karl F. Gauss (1777-1855), german mathematician
http://www.xs4all.nl/~jcdverha/scijokes/1_5.html
1. MATHEMATICS
Subsections
1.5 MATHEMATICS QUOTES
Index Comments and Contributions previous page mathematics
Top of page
Bottom of page Index Send comment ... Special Category: Karl F. Gauss From: http://math.furman.edu/~mwoodard/mquot.html Abel, Niels H. (1802 - 1829) [Norwegian Mathematician] [About Gauss' mathematical writing style] He is like the fox, who effaces his tracks in the sand with his tail. In G. F. Simmons, Calculus Gems, New York: Mcgraw Hill, Inc., 1992, p. 177. [Karl F. Gauss (1777-1855), German mathematician] mathematics
Top of page
Bottom of page Index Send comment ... Special Category: Jean le Rond d'Alembert From: http://math.furman.edu/~mwoodard/mquot.html D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1717-1783) [French mathematician and encyclopedist] The mathematician may be compared to a designer of garments, who is utterly oblivious of the creatures whom his garments may fit. To be sure, his art originated in the necessity for clothing such creatures, but this was long ago; to this day a shape will occasionally appear which will fit into the garment as if the garment had been made for it. Then there is no end of surprise and delight. mathematics
Top of page
Bottom of page Index Send comment Allen, Woody (1935-,American film director, writer,actor): Standard mathematics has recently been rendered obsolete by the discovery that for years we have been writing the numeral five backward. This has led to reevaluation of counting as a method of getting from one to ten. Students are taught advanced concepts of Boolean algebra, and formerly unsolvable equations are dealt with by threats of reprisals. In Howard Eves' Return to Mathematical Circles, Boston: Prindle, Weber, and Schmidt, 1988. Anglin, W.S.

88. ITBA | INSTITUTO TECNOLOGICO DE BUENOS AIRES | Universidad Privada
Mathematical SocietyÊ / Dansk Matematisk Forening (Lynby, Denmark); DMV, DeutscherMathematiker Vereinigung (german Mathematical Society, Berlin, germany);
http://www.itba.edu.ar/site.php?ino=3006

89. AIM25: University College London: London Mathematical Society Archive
generated by two Correlative Planes in collected mathematical papers In of Heat(London, 1867), translated from Rudolf Julius Emmanuel Clausius s german.
http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=5031&inst_id=13

90. Conferences.html
Applications , Bielefeld, germany. September 2000 ``Annual Meetingof the german Mathematical Union , Dresden, germany. August 2000
http://www.mathematik.uni-muenchen.de/~farkas/home/Conferences.html
Congresses/Conferences/Workshops attended
  • Mai 2002: Bavarian Mathematical Kolloquium,
    Fischbachau, Germany.
  • August 2001: Summer school``Relativistic Quantum Models",
    Piriac-sur-Mer, France
  • August 2001: Conference ``Relativistic Quantum Systems and Quantum Electrodynamics'',
    Oberwolfach, Germany
  • July 2001: Fifth European Meeting on ``Partial Differential Equations and Applications to Quantum Mechanics'',
    Cardiff, Wales.
  • June/July 2001: International Conference ``Function Spaces, Differential Operators, and Nonlinear Analysis'' in honour of Hans Triebel on his 65th birthday,
    Teistungen, Germany.
  • June 2001: Bavarian Mathematical Kolloquium,
    Thurnau, Germany.
  • March 2001: Conference "New Trends in Potential Analysis and Applications",
    Bielefeld, Germany.
  • September 2000: ``Annual Meeting of the German Mathematical Union'',
    Dresden, Germany.
  • August 2000: Summer School ``Quantum Field Theory - from a Hamiltonian point of view'',
    Sandbjerg Manor, Denmark.

91. Anecdotage.com - Mathematics Anecdotes. Anecdotes From Yeats To Gates
In 1893, the german mathematician Gottlob Frege published the first volume of a Simple Arithmetic Incredibly, the great number theorist Ernst Kummer was so
http://www.anecdotage.com/browse.php?term=mathematics

92. Other Job Agents For Mathematicians
Other Job Agents for mathematicians.
http://www.mathematik.tu-muenchen.de/web/jobs/anderjob/index.en.shtml
Zentrum Mathematik
Other Job Agents for Mathematicians
Please direct your comments or questions concerning our web pages by email to webmaster ma.tum.de
Impressum
Hint: For optimal display of this page you should activate style sheets in your browser and then reload this page. Hint: It appears that your browser does not support JavaScript, or you have it disabled. This site is best viewed with JavaScript enabled. If JavaScript is disabled in your browser, please turn it back on then reload this page. This does not make any difference for the content of the page. M. Kaplan / 12 Jan 2004

93. PERSONA MATHEMATICA (Member Search Engine)
PERSONA MATHEMATICA. Member Search. Engine. The MathNet helps you find information on members from more than 60 mathematical sites in Germany and Austria. search in name fields. search in research areas. search in document keywords. substring match
http://www.mi.uni-koeln.de/Math-Net/members/GlobMemBroker.html
Please excuse the unconvenient navigation for users without frame capable browsers.

94. Homleit
Über das Museum; Karte der Insel; Bedienung der Java-Applets;
http://members.aol.com/fvstein5/homb/Homleit.htm
Museum Insel Hombroich
Ein Projekt des Differenzierungskurses Mathematik/Informatik der Jahrgangsstufe 9 der Freiherr-vom-Stein-Schule Leverkusen im Dezember 1997 Email an: Gerd Steuernagel zur FvStein-Leitseite

95. DMV
Translate this page Die Vereinigung ist die berufsständische Vertretung der Mathematiker in Deutschland. Sie fördert
http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/DMV/

96. Read This: Mathematics Unbound
Another topic that I found very thoughtprovoking is that of the position of Germanmathematicians in European mathematics during the twentieth century.
http://www.maa.org/reviews/mathunbound.html
Search MAA Online MAA Home
Read This!
The MAA Online book review column
Mathematics Unbound:
edited by Karen Hunger Parshall and Adrian C. Rice
Reviewed by Stacy G. Langton
Mathematicians today form an international community. Mathematical papers often have co-authors who live in different countries. Mathematical ideas and discoveries are exchanged quickly over the Internet and World-Wide Web. Internet discussion groups on particular mathematical topics draw members from many countries. And, every four years, the International Congress of Mathematicians gathers attenders from all over the world. Few of us, perhaps, stop to wonder, "How did it get this way?" The volume under review, , explores this question. Jointly published by the American Mathematical Society and the London Mathematical Society in a series devoted to the History of Mathematics, it contains the proceedings of a symposium held at the University of Virginia in May 1999. There are 18 chapters, each by a different author or pair of authors. What will readers of MAA Online find of interest in this volume? Well, there is very little mathematics. On the other hand, I suspect that most mathematicians have a desire to know about the community they are a part of; and the question of how this community acquired the international nature it has today seems to me to be an inherently interesting one. An interesting topic does not, alas, guarantee an interesting presentation.

97. Cantor Dust - Encyclopedia Article About Cantor Dust. Free Access, No Registrati
Georg Ferdinand Ludwig Philipp Cantor (March 3, 1845 January 6, 1918) was aGerman mathematician who is best known as the creator of modern set theory.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Cantor Dust
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Cantor Dust
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Cantor dust , named after the mathematician Georg Cantor Georg Ferdinand Ludwig Philipp Cantor (March 3, 1845 - January 6, 1918) was a German mathematician who is best known as the creator of modern set theory. He is recognized by mathematicians for having extended set theory to the concept of transfinite numbers, including the cardinal and ordinal number classes. He was born in Saint Petersburg Russia, the son of a Danish merchant, George Waldemar Cantor, and a Russian musician, Maria Anna Böhm. In 1856 the family moved to Germany and he continued his education in German schools, earning his doctorate from the University of Berlin in 1867.
Click the link for more information. , is the two-dimensional version of the Cantor set The Cantor set , named after German mathematician Georg Cantor, is a remarkable construction involving only the real numbers between zero and one.
Click the link for more information. In the limit, starting from a

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