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Between tradition and innovation : Gregorio a San Vicente and the Flemish Jesuit mathematics school / by Ad J. Meskens ; with contributions by Herman van Looy.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Meskens, Ad, author.
Contributor:
Looy, Herman van, contributor.
Series:
Jesuit Studies
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Saint-Vincent, Grégoire de, 1584-1667.
Saint-Vincent, Grégoire de.
Belgium--Intellectual life--17th century.
Belgium.
Jesuits--Education--Belgium--History--17th century.
Jesuits.
Jesuits--Belgium--Intellectual life.
Mathematics--Belgium--History--17th century.
Mathematics.
Mathematicians--Belgium--Biography.
Mathematicians.
Mathematics teachers--Belgium--Biography.
Mathematics teachers.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xii, 293 pages) : illustrations, maps
Place of Publication:
Leiden, The Netherlands ; Boston : Brill, [2021]
Summary:
"This book shows that the Flemish Jesuit Mathematics School had profound influence on the course of mathematics in the seventeenth century. Manuscript evidence shows that its professor, Gregorio of San Vicente SJ, had developed a logically sound integration method more than a decade before Cavalieri, but in the 1620s was forbidden to publish by his superiors. San Vicente's students were dispersed all over Europe, through them his methods influenced numerous mathematicians, Leibniz and Huygens among them. Many of these students became famous mathematicians in their own right. Ad Meskens convincingly shows, by carefully tracing their careers and outlining their biographies, that their contributions to mathematics, mechanics, optics and architecture were more often than not ground breaking"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Introduction: The Low Countries, Spain, and Europe
The college and its school of mathematics
The seventeenth century : the dawn of a new era
Francisco de Aguilón and mathematical optics
Gregorio a San Vicente : an ignored genius
The creative Antwerp-Leuven period
Exhaustion : the road to infinitesimals
Infinitesimal calculus at work
Rome and Prague, the final discoveries
The erroneous circle quadrature
Joannes della Faille and the beginning of projective geometry
The Antwerp students
The Leuven students
The later disciples
The Jesuit architects
The influence of the school of mathematics.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
90-04-44790-3
OCLC:
1238128475

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