Simon Stevin (1548–1620) Flemish scientist, mathematician and military engineer
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
Simon Stevin (1548–1620) Flemish scientist, mathematician and military engineer
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
Simon Stevin (1548–1620) Flemish scientist, mathematician and military engineer
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
“The second Definition. Number is that which expresseth the quantitie of each thing.”
Simon Stevin (1548–1620) Flemish scientist, mathematician and military engineer
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
Aristotle (-384–-321 BC) Classical Greek philosopher, student of Plato and founder of Western philosophy
Moreover, it has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
I. 1. as translated by William Whewell and as quoted by Florian Cajori, A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches (1899) as Aristotle's proof that the world is perfect.
On the Heavens
“The sixt Definition. A Whole number is either a unitie, or a compounded multitude of unities.”
Simon Stevin (1548–1620) Flemish scientist, mathematician and military engineer
Disme: the Art of Tenths, Or, Decimall Arithmetike (1608)
Paul Carus (1852–1919) American philosopher
"Reflections on Magic Squares" in The Monist, Vol. 16 (1906), p. 139
Pierre-Simon Laplace book Philosophical Essay on Probabilities
Philosophical Essay on Probabilities (1902)
Context: The theory of chance consists in reducing all the events of the same kind to a certain number of cases equally possible, that is to say, to such as we may be equally undecided about in regard to their existence, and in determining the number of cases favorable to the event whose probability is sought.<!--p.6
Georg Cantor (1845–1918) mathematician, inventor of set theory
Letter to Richard Dedekind (1899), as translated in From Frege to Gödel : A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879-1931 (1967) by Jean Van Heijenoort, p. 117