Biography-center - Letter D ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Darwin. html. dase, zacharias. wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/ Mathematicians/dase.html. Dassanowsky, Elfi von http://www.biography-center.com/d.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 492 biographies
Stieffel Translate this page Herr zacharias dase hat die Gefälligkeit gehabt, in meiner Wohnungneue Beweise seiner ausscrordeutlichen Gaben abzulegen. Wenn http://users.lk.net/~stepanov/mnemo/album.html
Extractions: D as " Nil admirari " der Philosophie wird einmal gründlich widerlegt durch die Leistungen des Herrn Dase im Gebiete des Zeichen- und Zahlengedächtnisses, von denen der Unterzeichnete mehrmals Zeuge zu sein das Vergnügen hatte. Hier verhalten sich Mathematiker zu einer Thatsache des Geistes, die man nicht begreifen, nur erfahren kann, wie Kinder, welche mühsam buchstabiren gegen den Sprachkünstler Mezzofanti. Lässt er uns auch einen Blick in seine Methode thun, so können wir doch der erstaunlichen Schnelligkeit nicht folgen, mit welcher er 10 steilige Zahlen zu einem Produkte verwebt, oder ein Produkt wieder entwirrt in der Division benannter und unbenanuter, ganzer und gebrochener Zahlen, und dem Ausziehen von Quadrat- und Kubikwurzeln. Wie wir andere z. B. das Wort "Anschaulichkeit" mit einem Blicke lesen und alle Buchstaben und deren Aufeinanderfolge vor- und rückwärts kennen, so braucht Herr Dase eine 12 stellige Zahl nur anzublicken, um sie sogleich auf der schwarzen Tafel seines Gedächtnisses angeschrieben zu sehen, und vor- und rückwärts die Ziffern hersagen zu können. Ja dieses Gedächtniss behält 65 stellige Zahlen, wenn sie durch Rechenoperationen vor ihm entstanden sind, und giebt sie, wenn man darnach verlangt, zu jeder Zeit wieder, wenn auch das Mannigfaltigste dazwischen seine Thätigkeit in Ansprach genommen hatte. Unmittelbare Anschauung und wunderbare Fertigkeit in vermittelter Thätigkeit durch eigenthümliche Methoden sind hier vereinigt. Und diese Thätigkeit geschieht ohne Anstrengung, ist unverkennbar ein mit Lust verbundenes Spiel des Geistes, der in einem frischen, gesunden und kräftigen Körper wohnt, der damit ein anspruchloses Benehmen verbindet, was ihm sogleich die Herzen aller Anwesenden gewinnt, die auch darin ihre Erwartung übertroffen finden, dass sie sich aufs Interessanteste unterhalten und die kürzeste Stunde gehabt haben.
Norlos.com Don't Mess With The Sock Monkey Similar tales are told of zacharias dase, the number prodigy, who would instantly call out '183' or '79 Again I thought of dase, whom I had read of years before http://www.norlos.com/weblog/storage/000995.php
Extractions: December 11, 2003 early . Uh, not really. Posted by DoubleOHSoul at December 11, 2003 11:37 AM Bellyaches You just know some Stephenson geek will want it on his basketball jersey. Posted by Carlos on December 11, 2003 12:01 PM Actually that number came to me in a dream a long time ago. If only I'd known it was such a big fuckin' deal. On a related note, here's an interesting Oliver Sacks piece involving primes: When I first met the twins, John and Michael, in 1966 in a state hospital, they were already well known. They had been on radio and television, and made the subject of detailed scientific and popular reports ([1],[2]). They had even, I suspected, found their way into science fiction, a little 'fictionalised', but essentially as portrayed in the accounts that had been published [3]. The twins, who were then twenty-six years old, had been in institutions since the age of seven, variously diagnosed as autistic, psychotic or severely retarded. Most of the accounts concluded that, as idiots savants go, there was 'nothing much to them' -except for their remarkable 'documentary' memories of the tiniest visual details of their own experience, and their use of an unconscious, calendrical algorithm that enabled them to say at once what day of the week a date far in the past or future would fall. this is the view taken by Steven Smith, in his comprehensive and imaginative book, The Great Mental Calculators (1983). There have been, to my knowledge, no further studies of the twins since the mid-Sixties, the brief interest they aroused being quenched by the apparent 'solution' of the problems they presented.
Dase Johann Martin zacharias dase. Born 1824 in Hamburg, Germany Died 1861. zachariasdase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Dase.html
Extractions: Zacharias Dase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability. He gave exhibitions of his calculating powers in Germany, Austria and England. While in Vienna in 1840 he was urged to use his powers for scientific purposes and he discussed projects with Gauss and others. Dase used his calculating ability to calculate p to 200 places in 1844. This was published in Crelle's Journal for 1844. Dase also constructed 7 figure log tables and produced a table of factors of all numbers between 7 000 000 and 10 000 000. Gauss requested that the Hamburg Academy of Sciences allow Dase to devote himself full-time to his mathematical work but, although they agreed to this, Dase died before he was able to do much more work. Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson A Reference (One book/article) Mathematicians born in the same country Cross-references to History Topics Memory, mental arithmetic and mathematics
Dase Biography of Johann Martin zacharias dase (18241861) Johann Martin zacharias dase. Born 1824 in Hamburg, Germany Welcome page. zacharias dase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability http://sfabel.tripod.com/mathematik/database/Dase.html
Extractions: Previous (Alphabetically) Next Welcome page Zacharias Dase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability. He gave exhibitions of his calculating powers in Germany, Austria and England. While in Vienna in 1840 he was urged to use his powers for scientific purposes and he discussed projects with Gauss and others. Dase used his calculating ability to calculate to 200 places in 1844. This was published in Crelle's Journal for 1844. Dase also constructed 7 figure log tables and produced a table of factors of all numbers between 7 000 000 and 10 000 000. Gauss requested that the Hamburg Academy of Sciences allow Dase to devote himself full-time to his mathematical work but, although they agreed to this, Dase died before he was able to do much more work. Reference (One book/article) Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index
References For Dase References for zacharias dase. Books WW Rouse Ball, CalculatingProdiges, in Mathematical Recreations and Essays (1892). http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Dase.html
Dase Biography of zacharias dase (18241861) Johann Martin zacharias dase. Born 1824 in Hamburg, Germany Main index. zacharias dase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Dase.html
Extractions: Zacharias Dase had incredible calculating skills but little mathematical ability. He gave exhibitions of his calculating powers in Germany, Austria and England. While in Vienna in 1840 he was urged to use his powers for scientific purposes and he discussed projects with Gauss and others. Dase used his calculating ability to calculate p to 200 places in 1844. This was published in Crelle's Journal for 1844. Dase also constructed 7 figure log tables and produced a table of factors of all numbers between 7 000 000 and 10 000 000. Gauss requested that the Hamburg Academy of Sciences allow Dase to devote himself full-time to his mathematical work but, although they agreed to this, Dase died before he was able to do much more work. Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson A Reference (One book/article) Mathematicians born in the same country Cross-references to History Topics Memory, mental arithmetic and mathematics
ÌÀÒÅÌÀÒÈ×ÅÑÊÈÅ ÂÓÍÄÅÐÊÈÍÄÛ. ÔÐÀÍÊ Ä. ÌÈÒ×ÅË 5), gives the name as simply zacharias dase, which seems to be the way in which dase angewandle Mathematik), XXVII, 1844, p. 198; zacharias dase, FactorenTafeln, Hamburg, Vol http://users.lk.net/~stepanov/mnemo/mitch.html
Extractions: I. By a "mathematical prodigy" we shall mean a person who shows unusual ability in mental arithmetic or mental algebra, especially when this ability develops at an early age, and without external aids or special tuition. We shall use the word "calculator" in the sense of "mental calculator," as a synonym for "mathematical prodigy," and shall usually mean by "calculation" "mental calculation," unless the contrary is clearly indicated by the context. A "professional calculator" will be taken to mean a mental calculator who gives public exhibitions of his talent. "Computer," however, will be restricted to mean one who calculates on paper. All problems mentioned as solved by the mathematical prodigies will be understood to be done mentally, unless otherwise indicated. There are several possible bases for a classification of the mathematical prodigies. We might group them chronologically, as Scripture We begin, then, with Fuller and Buxton, who have much in common, and who are the first modern calculators about whom reliable data are available. Colburn, Mondeux, and Inaudi form the next group, followed by Zaneboni, Diamandi, and Dase. Then come the two Bidders and Safford, followed by Gauss and Ampere, and finally those who may be called "minor prodigies," whether because of limited powers of calculation or because the available information is not sufficient for a more detailed account. Tom Fuller (1710-1790), "the Virginia calculator," came from Africa as a slave when about 14 years old. We first hear of him as a calculator at the age of 70 or thereabouts, when, among other problems, he reduced a year and a half to seconds in about two minutes, and 70 years, 17 days, 12 hours to seconds in about a minute and a half, correcting the result of his examiner, who had failed to take account of the leap-years.
The Red Pill smart. Number Smart In 1844, Johann Martin zacharias dase calculatedPi correctly to 200 places in less than 2 months. dase could http://www.theaterchurch.com/pages/evotionals/richtext/evotional_09122003.htm
Extractions: In 1983, a Harvard professor named Howard Gardner wrote a ground-breaking book titled Frames of Mind . The book popularized the theory of multiple intelligences Gardner said that intelligence couldn't be measured by an ACT, GRE, or IQ test. He argued for the existence of multiple intelligences. In other words, different people are smart in different ways Frames of Mind identified seven types of intelligence. Here's a paraphrased list of these
The Theory Of Multiple-Giftedness In 1844, Johann Martin zacharias dase calculated Pi correctly to 200places in less than 2 months. dase could count the number of http://www.theaterchurch.com/pages/evotionals/evotional_07112002.htm
Extractions: Behind the Minsitry: Part 2 This past week Ted Williams passed away at the age of 83. Some sports fans consider him the greatest hitter of all-time. His lifetime batting average was .344. He hit 521 lifetime homers. And he was the last major leaguer to hit over .400 for a season. I don't know if Ted Williams was number smart, music smart, or picture smart, but I think it's safe to say that Ted Williams was body smart. Three different people. Three different centuries. Three different careers. One thing in common: they were all intelligent in different ways! That's MI theory in a nutshell. Different people are smart in different ways! What I love about MI theory is the freedom it gives to be who you are. Just because you don't perform well on written tests in a classroom doesn't mean you're not smart. There are different types of intelligence!
1848 - Flugschriften Im Netz Translate this page Digitale Bibliothek. 1848 - Flugschriften im Netz. Person dase, Johann MartinZacharias (1824 - 1861). Signatur, SF 16 / 114 MAPP / B 10 6 (Dokument ansehen). http://1848.stub.uni-frankfurt.de/cgi-bin/kutili.rb?person=Dase, Johann Martin Z
References For Dase References for the biography of zacharias dase References for zacharias dase. Books http//wwwhistory.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/ References/dase.html http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/References/Dase.html
Lebensdaten Von Mathematikern Darwin, George (1845 - 1912) dase, zacharias (1824 - 1861) Davenport, Harold http://www.mathe.tu-freiberg.de/~hebisch/cafe/lebensdaten.html
Extractions: Marc Cohn Dies ist eine Sammlung, die aus verschiedenen Quellen stammt, u. a. aus Jean Dieudonne, Geschichte der Mathematik, 1700 - 1900, VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, Berlin 1985. Helmut Gericke, Mathematik in Antike und Orient - Mathematik im Abendland, Fourier Verlag, Wiesbaden 1992. Otto Toeplitz, Die Entwicklung der Infinitesimalrechnung, Springer, Berlin 1949. MacTutor History of Mathematics archive A B C ... Z Abbe, Ernst (1840 - 1909)
Full Alphabetical Index Translate this page Germinal (392) Danti, Egnatio (257) Dantzig, David van (55) Dantzig, George (501*)Darboux, Jean (814*) Darwin, George (167) dase, zacharias (125) Davenport http://intranet.woodvillehs.sa.edu.au/pages/resources/maths/History/Flllph.htm
Full Alphabetical Index dase, zacharias (125) Davenport http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/4142/matematici.html
Extractions: Anche le particelle sub-atomiche dell'infinatamente piccolo (materia "profonda" in analogia con l'"Io Profondo") e che alcuni fisici (Charon) considerano dotati di "intelligenza", sembrano essere in grado di fare calcoli complessi in tempo reale (l'analogia potrebbe essere utile alle ipotesi successive del doppio software e del "Paesaggio Mentale" di Davies.
Neue Seite 1 dase, zacharias(1824 - 1861). Davenport, Harold (1907 - 1969). Davidov, August (1823 - 1885). http://www.mathe-ecke.de/mathematiker.htm
Extractions: Abbe, Ernst (1840 - 1909) Abel, Niels Henrik (5.8.1802 - 6.4.1829) Abraham bar Hiyya (1070 - 1130) Abraham, Max (1875 - 1922) Abu Kamil, Shuja (um 850 - um 930) Abu'l-Wafa al'Buzjani (940 - 998) Ackermann, Wilhelm (1896 - 1962) Adams, John Couch (5.6.1819 - 21.1.1892) Adams, John Frank (5.11.1930 - 7.1.1989) Adelard von Bath (1075 - 1160) Adler, August (1863 - 1923) Adrain, Robert (1775 - 1843) Aepinus, Franz Ulrich Theodosius (13.12.1724 - 10.8.1802) Agnesi, Maria (1718 - 1799) Ahlfors, Lars (1907 - 1996) Ahmed ibn Yusuf (835 - 912) Ahmes (um 1680 - um 1620 v. Chr.) Aida Yasuaki (1747 - 1817) Aiken, Howard Hathaway (1900 - 1973) Airy, George Biddell (27.7.1801 - 2.1.1892) Aithoff, David (1854 - 1934) Aitken, Alexander (1895 - 1967) Ajima, Chokuyen (1732 - 1798) Akhiezer, Naum Il'ich (1901 - 1980) al'Battani, Abu Allah (um 850 - 929) al'Biruni, Abu Arrayhan (973 - 1048) al'Chaijami (? - 1123) al'Haitam, Abu Ali (965 - 1039) al'Kashi, Ghiyath (1390 - 1450) al'Khwarizmi, Abu Abd-Allah ibn Musa (um 790 - um 850) Albanese, Giacomo (1890 - 1948) Albert von Sachsen (1316 - 8.7.1390)
Table Of Contents Translate this page April 1847 - Über dase. Faktorentafeln. 42. . . CHAPTER, GAUSS an zacharias dase,7. Dez. 1850 - Aus dem Vorwort zu daseS Faktorentafeln, 1862. 44. . CHAPTER, 10. http://134.76.163.65/agora_docs/137978TABLE_OF_CONTENTS.html