Ronald Calinger: Neilly Series Lecture
Title
Ronald Calinger: Neilly Series Lecture
Creator
Date
2008-03-26
Description
Professor of history at the Catholic University of America in Washington, DC, Calinger will discuss the mathematician Leonhard Euler. The Swiss-born genius is one of the four greatest mathematicians in history. This synopsis of his life, research, and influence set within the framework of the European Enlightenment begins with a review of his education in Basel. Euler's Berlin period includes his invention of the calculus of variations, his relations with Frederick the Great, his pulse theory in optics, and his rivalry with Alexis Clairaut and Jean d'Alembert over lunar theory. His second period in St. Petersburg includes his third lunar theory and his contributions to integral calculus and magic squares.
Calinger is the author of A Contextual History of Mathematics,1999, the editor of Classics of Mathematics, 1995, Vita Mathematica, 1996, and the History of Mathematics Series of Johns Hopkins University Press.
Calinger is the author of A Contextual History of Mathematics,1999, the editor of Classics of Mathematics, 1995, Vita Mathematica, 1996, and the History of Mathematics Series of Johns Hopkins University Press.
Format
image/jpeg
Collection
Citation
Calinger, Ronald, “Ronald Calinger: Neilly Series Lecture,” RBSCP Exhibits, accessed November 24, 2024, https://rclomeka2.lib.rochester.edu/items/show/4796.