REFLECTIONS ON THREE CENTURIES OF LEONHARD EULER
DOI:
10.47976/RBHM2009v9n1707-12Palavras-chave:
REFLECTIONS ON THREE CENTURIES OF LEONHARD EULERResumo
In the year 2007, the whole world commemorated three centuries of the birth of the Swiss Leonhard Euler, possibly the greatest mathematician of the 18th century.” This is an invented statement, but, on a first inspection, it seems to be a fair description of things that are well-known to the point of being taken for granted: Indeed, Leonhard Euler was born in 1707 in Basel, Switzerland (having lived for almost the entirety of the 18th century), so that 2007 marked his tercentenary; the man and his work were in fact remembered in countless commemorations, all of them being certainly well-deserved, given that he really was a emarkable mathematician. In this way, the opening statement of this note could well pass as nothing more than a description of a fact worth mentioning.
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Referências
Gay, Peter. 1995. The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism. New York: W. W. Norton.
Hobsbawm, Eric J. 1992. Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
O’Gorman, Frank. 1997. The Long Eighteenth Century: British Political and Social History 1688-1832. London: Hodder Arnold.
Maier, Charles S. 2000. “Preface”. In: Pnina G. Abir-Am and Clark A. Elliott (eds.), Commemorative Practices in Science: Historical Perspectives on the Politics of Collective Memory. Thematic issue of Osiris (2nd Series), vol. 14, ix-xii.
Suisky, Dieter. 2009. Euler as Physicist. Berlin: Springer.
Zimmer, Oliver. 2003. A Contested Nation: History, Memory and Nationalism in Switzerland, 1761-1891. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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