Benjamin Franklin's Numbers: An Unsung Mathematical OdysseyPrinceton University Press, 12/01/2021 - 274 páginas Few American lives have been as celebrated--or as closely scrutinized--as that of Benjamin Franklin. Yet until now Franklin's biographers have downplayed his interest in mathematics, at best portraying it as the idle musings of a brilliant and ever-restless mind. In Benjamin Franklin's Numbers, Paul Pasles reveals a side of the iconic statesman, scientist, and writer that few Americans know--his mathematical side. |
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... Improved ... for the Year of Our Lord 1750, Franklin and Hall, 1749. 19. That he believed growth to be exponential is clear from the fact that he refers to a constant doubling time: “doubled every twenty years,” “doubling ... once in ...
... Improved for 1751. 32. Letter to G. Whatley; see note 31. 33. A similar explanation is sometimes given as an objection to the use of DNA testing in order to identify remote ancestors (see, for example, in Time, July 11, 2005). If you ...
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Índice
20 | |
Almanacs and Assembly | 61 |
Philomath Math | 83 |
A Visit to the Country | 117 |
The Mutation Spreads Adventures Among | 141 |
Circling the Square | 158 |
Newly Unearthed Discoveries | 191 |
Legacy | 226 |
Acknowledgements | 243 |
Index | 253 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Benjamin Franklin's Numbers: An Unsung Mathematical Odyssey Paul C. Pasles Pré-visualização limitada - 2008 |
Benjamin Franklin's Numbers: An Unsung Mathematical Odyssey Paul C. Pasles Pré-visualização limitada - 2008 |