TY - GEN
T1 - Calculus and analysis in early 19th century Britain: the work of William Wallace
AU - Craik, Alexander Duncan Davidson
N1 - Historia Mathematica
PY - 1999/8
Y1 - 1999/8
N2 - Scottish-born William Wallace (1768-1843) was an early exponent of the differential calculus in Britain and translator of French mathematical works. Encyclopaedias published during the early 19th century provided a valuable educational resource, to which Wallace and his colleague, James Ivory, contributed. Wallace's encyclopaedia articles on "Fluxions" and his other analytical writings are examined here, as are his relations with James Ivory, John Herschel, and others. Wallace's long 1815 article on "Fluxions" in the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia was the first complete account of calculus, using differential notation, to be published in English. There, he attempted an original and rigorous "doctrine of limits," which deserved more attention than it received. In 1832, while professor of mathematics in Edinburgh, he applied analysis to support the reform of taxation proposed in the Reform Bill. It is suggested that the later neglect of Wallace's achievements is attributable to a mix of personal, institutional, political, and national rivalries. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
AB - Scottish-born William Wallace (1768-1843) was an early exponent of the differential calculus in Britain and translator of French mathematical works. Encyclopaedias published during the early 19th century provided a valuable educational resource, to which Wallace and his colleague, James Ivory, contributed. Wallace's encyclopaedia articles on "Fluxions" and his other analytical writings are examined here, as are his relations with James Ivory, John Herschel, and others. Wallace's long 1815 article on "Fluxions" in the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia was the first complete account of calculus, using differential notation, to be published in English. There, he attempted an original and rigorous "doctrine of limits," which deserved more attention than it received. In 1832, while professor of mathematics in Edinburgh, he applied analysis to support the reform of taxation proposed in the Reform Bill. It is suggested that the later neglect of Wallace's achievements is attributable to a mix of personal, institutional, political, and national rivalries. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
M3 - Other contribution
VL - 26
ER -