The Volterra chronicles : the life and times of an extraordinary mathematician, 1860-1940

書誌事項

The Volterra chronicles : the life and times of an extraordinary mathematician, 1860-1940

Judith R. Goodstein

(History of mathematics, v. 31)

American Mathematical Society , London Mathematical Society, c2007

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注記

Contains: Sir Edmund Whittaker, "Vito Voltera, 1860-1940", reprint from Obituary notices of fellows of the Royal Society of London, 3 (1941)

Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-279) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The life of Vito Volterra, one of the finest scientists and mathematicians Italy ever produced, spans the period from the unification of the Italian peninsula in 1860 to the onset of the Second World War--an era of unparalleled progress and unprecedented turmoil in the history of Europe. Born into an Italian Jewish family in the year of the liberation of Italy's Jewish ghettos, Volterra was barely in his twenties when he made his name as a mathematician and took his place as a leading light in Italy's modern scientific renaissance. By his early forties, he was a world-renowned mathematician, a sought-after figure in European intellectual and social circles, the undisputed head of Italy's mathematics and physics school--and still living with his mother, who decided the time was ripe to arrange his marriage. When Italy entered World War I in 1915, the fifty-five-year-old Volterra served with distinction and verve as a lieutenant and did not put on civilian clothes again until the Armistice of 1918. This book, based in part on unpublished personal letters and interviews, traces the extraordinary life and times of one of Europe's foremost scientists and mathematicians, from his teenage struggles to avoid the stifling life of a ""respectable"" bank clerk in Florence, to his seminal mathematical work--which today influences fields as diverse as economics, physics, and ecology--and from his spirited support of Italy's scientific and democratic institutions during his years as an Italian Senator, to his steadfast defiance of the Fascists and Mussolini. In recounting the life of this outstanding scientist, European Jewish intellectual, committed Italian patriot, and devoted if frequently distracted family man, The Volterra Chronicles depicts a remarkable individual in a prodigious age and takes the reader on a vivid and splendidly detailed historical journey.

目次

The Jewish mathematician ""A new era is dawning,"" 1860 ""This, above all, I promise,"" 1863-1870 ""That damned passion,"" 1874-1877 ""Long live the republic,"" 1878-1882 ""Professor by deed,"" 1880-1883 ""Our professor of small intervals,"" 1883-1893 ""The life I live,"" 1887-1895 ""Demonstrations of their resentment,"" 1893-1900 ""God liberate us from his symbols"" ""It is the greatest desire of my life,"" 1900 ""Most important for our fatherland"" ""Will they create a new world?"" ""A political man"" ""A professor in America"" ""Empires die"" Epilogue Sir Edmund Whittaker, ""Vito Volterra, 1860-1940"" On the attempts to apply mathematics to the biological and social sciences Science at the present moment and the new Italian society for the progress of science Acknowledgments Selected bibliography Notes Index.

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