Overview
- Catherine Goldstein
Histoire des sciences mathématiques, Institut de mathématiques de Jussieu, Paris, France
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- Norbert Schappacher
UFR de mathématique et d’informatique / IRMA, Strasbourg Cedex, France
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- Joachim Schwermer
Fakultät für Mathematik, Universität Wien, Wien, Austria
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiA Book’s History
Front Matter
Pages 1-1
Algebraic Equations, Quadratic Forms, Higher Congruences: Key Mathematical Techniques of the Disquisitiones Arithmeticae
Front Matter
Pages 105-105
Algebraic Equations, Quadratic Forms, Higher Congruences: Key Mathematical Techniques of the Disquisitiones Arithmeticae
Composition of Binary Quadratic Forms and the Foundations of Mathematics
- Harold M. Edwards
Pages 129-144Composition of Quadratic Forms: An Algebraic Perspective
- Della D. Fenster, Joachim Schwermer
Pages 145-158The Unpublished Section Eight: On the Way to Function Fields over a Finite Field
- Günther Frei
Pages 159-198
The German Reception of the Disquisitiones Arithmeticae: Institutions and Ideas
Front Matter
Pages 199-199A Network of Scientific Philanthropy: Humboldt’s Relations with Number Theorists
- Herbert Pieper
Pages 201-233‘O Θɛòζ’ Aριθμηίíξɛι: The Rise of Pure Mathematics as Arithmetic with Gauss
- José Ferreirós
Pages 234-268
Complex Numbers and Complex Functions in Arithmetic
Front Matter
Pages 269-269From Reciprocity Laws to Ideal Numbers: An (Un)Known Manuscript by E.E. Kummer
- Reinhard Bölling
Pages 270-290
Numbers as Model Objects of Mathematics
Front Matter
Pages 313-313
Number Theory and the Disquisitiones in France after 1850
Front Matter
Pages 375-375
Reviews
From the reviews:
"A book that traces the profound effect Gauss’s masterpiece has had on mathematics over the past two centuries. … The shaping of arithmetic is a major accomplishment, one which will stand as an important reference work on the history of number theory for many years. … The editors and authors deserve our thanks for their efforts." (Victor J. Katz, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2008 h)
“It’s a big book, with eighteen authors and almost six hundred pages, and it mixes the work of well-established scholars with that of recent Ph.D.’s. … This volume deserves a wide audience, both among the mathematically able and among historians of nineteenth-century science.” (Thomas Archibald, Institute for Science and International Security, Vol. 102 (2), June, 2011)
Editors and Affiliations
Histoire des sciences mathématiques, Institut de mathématiques de Jussieu, Paris, France
Catherine Goldstein
UFR de mathématique et d’informatique / IRMA, Strasbourg Cedex, France
Norbert Schappacher
Fakultät für Mathematik, Universität Wien, Wien, Austria
Joachim Schwermer
About the editors
Catherine Goldstein is Directrice de recherches du CNRS and works at the Institut de mathématiques de Jussieu (Paris, France). She is the author of "Un théorème de Fermat et ses lecteurs" (1995) and a coeditor of "Mathematical Europe: History, Myth, Identity"(1996). Her research aims at developing a social history of mathematical practices and results, combining close readings and a network analysis of texts. Her current projects include the study of mathematical sciences through World War I and of experimentation in XVII th-century number theory.
Norbert Schappacher is professor of mathematics at Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg.His mathematical interests relate to the arithmetic of elliptic curves.But his current research projects lie in the history of mathematics. Specifically, he focuses on the intertwinement of philosophical and political categories with major junctures in the development of mathematical disciplines in the XIX\up{th} and XX\up{th} centuries. Examples include number theory and algebraic geometry, but also medical statistics.
Joachim Schwermer is professor of mathematics at University of Vienna. In addition, he serves as scientific director at the Erwin-Schroedinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics, Vienna. His research interests lie in number theory and algebra, in particular, in questions arising in arithmetic algebraic geometry and the theory of automorphic forms. He takes a keen interest in the mathematical sciences in the XIX\up{th} and XX\up{th} centuries in their historical context.
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Bibliographic Information
Book Title:The Shaping of Arithmetic after C.F. Gauss's Disquisitiones Arithmeticae
Editors:Catherine Goldstein, Norbert Schappacher, Joachim Schwermer
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-34720-0
Publisher:Springer Berlin, Heidelberg
eBook Packages:Mathematics and Statistics,Mathematics and Statistics (R0)
Copyright Information:Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2007
Hardcover ISBN:978-3-540-20441-1Published: 09 January 2007
Softcover ISBN:978-3-642-05802-8Published: 12 February 2010
eBook ISBN:978-3-540-34720-0Published: 03 February 2007
Edition Number:1
Number of Pages:XII, 578
Number of Illustrations:36 b/w illustrations
Topics:Number Theory,Algebra,History of Mathematical Sciences