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         Jourdain Philip:     more books (32)
  1. Selected essays on the history of set theory and logics (1906-1918) (Instrumenta rationis) by Philip E. B Jourdain, 1991
  2. The Science Of Mechanics - Supplementary Volume by Ernst Mach, 2007-11-06

41. Natural Theology > Home Page
Contributions to the Founding of the Theory of Transfinite Numbers (Translated,with Introduction and Notes by philip EB jourdain), Dover 1955 Jacket
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... to restore theology to the mainstream of science Philosophy is written in this grand book - the universe, which stands continually open before our gaze. But the book cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and to read the alphabet in which it is composed. It is written in the language of mathematics ... . Galilei , p 238.
Welcome to natural theology
The purpose of this site is to revitalise theology, both for myself and possibly for you. Theology was once considered the keystone of the sciences. It lost its position during the scientific revolution that began about 500 years ago. While the new mathematical, empirical and critical methods set off the explosion of knowledge that still engulfs us, the theologians were left behind. Although theology has tried to make a comback many times, it remains a backwater because there are no new data. In theological tradition, divine revelation was once for all and forever. We cannot change what is written, only look for new ways to interpret holy writ. Changes are necessary if theology is not to die.

42. A S T R O N O M Y C O S M O L O G Y Sixteent H Seventee N
jourdain, philip EB Robert Hooke as a Precursor of Newton. jourdain, philipEB Elliptic Orbits and the Growth of the Third Law with Newton.
http://web.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch/pages/03-Sci-Rev/SCI-REV-Teaching/bibliogra
A Selected Bibliography - Historiographic - Robert A Hatch - University of Florida Bibliographic Guides, Basic Sources, Journals Annual critical bibliography on the history of science, published in each volume of Isis. Archive for History of Exact Sciences . Berlin: 1960. ff. Astonomischer Jahresbericht . Band: 1899-1957. 1-57. The Astrophysical Journal . Chicago: 1895. Baranowski, Henryk. Bibliografia Koernikowska . 1509-1955. (Warszawa: Panstwowe Wydawniotwo Naukowe, 1958). Bigourdan, G. Invertaire General et Sommaire des Manuscrits de la bibliotheque de l'Observatoire de Paris, in Annales de l'Observatoire de Paris, Paris, 1895. Fl-60. A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists . Ed. T.I. Williams. London: 1969. Carmody, F.J. Arabic Astronomical and Astrological Sciences in Latin Translation . Berkeley: 1956. Centaurus. International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology . Copenhagen: 1950. ff. Cotte, L. Table Alphabetique des Matieres Traitees dan les Ouvrages qui composent la Bibliographie astronomique de M. de La Lande Dictionary of Scientific Biography . Ed. C.C. Gillispie. New York: 1970. Duhem, P.

43. The Scientific Revolution - Bibliography - Classic & Historiographic Sources - T
jourdain, philip EB Elliptic Orbits and the Growth of the Third Law with Newton. The Monist 30 (1920) 18398. jourdain. Newton s Theorems on the
http://web.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch/pages/02-TeachingResources/bibliography/05b
Scientific Revolution Bibliography - Scientific Revolution Home Page - Dr Robert A. Hatch - University of Florida - http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch T H E S C I E N T I F I C R E V O L U T I O N
Dr Robert A. Hatch - University of Florida General Works
Boas, Marie. The Scientific Renaissance : 1450-1630. NY: Harper, 1965. Bonelli, Maria L.R.; William R. Shea (eds.). Reason, Experiment, and Mysticism in the Scientific Revolution . NY: Science History, 1975. Burtt, E.A. The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science. 2nd ed. 1932. Garden City: Doubleday Anchor, 1954. Butterfield, Herbert. The Origins of Modern Science 1300-1800 . 1957. NY: Free Pr., 1968. Cohen, I. Bernard. The Birth of a New Physics . Garden City, NY: 1960. Crombie, A.C. Medieval and Early Modern Science . 2 vols. (orginally issued as Augustine to Galileo). Garden City, NY: 1959. Forbes, R. J.; E. J. Dijksterhuis. A History of Science and Technology. 2 vols. Baltimore: Penguine, 1963. Hall, A. Rupert.

44. Reading 1968, Richard Seltzer
41 philip jourdain 1 Nature of Mathematics 20/3 FREN SC1. 42 Bulgakhov 1 Masterand Margarita 20/1 RUSS N12. 43 Shakespeare 19 Measure for Measure 16/2 ENG
http://www.samizdat.com/read68.html
READING 1968
Attached is a list of the books I read in 1968. Sometimes I add markers like (*) to indicate books I particularly like. I also try to keep track of how many books of a particular kind (novel, etc.) and from a given country and century (Eng. 19th, etc.), I read each year. Richard Seltzer seltzer@samizdat.com www.samizdat.com For reviews of some of these books, see www.samizdat.com/isyn/reviews.html For brief notes on others, see www.samizdat.com/readrev.html For more on books and reading, see www.samizdat.com/readers.html January 1 Robert Creeley 1 Poems 1950-65 20/1 AMER P1 2 Thomas Pynchon 1 ***Crying of Lot 49 20/2 AMER N1 3 Henry Fielding 3 Shamela 18/1 ENG N2 4 Robert Lowell 2 Near the Ocean 20/3 AMER P2 Feb. 1968 6 Laurence Sterne 1 ****Tristram Shandy 18/2 ENG N4 7 Modern Russian Short Stories ST1 8 Zuckmayer 1 Hauptmann von Kopenick (deutsch) 20/1 GER PL1 9 Northrop Frye 1 **Anatomy of Criticism 20/1 CAN CR1 10 Byron 1 Don Juan 19/2 ENG P3 22nd birthday 11 Henry James 2 The Spoils of Poynton 19/1 AMER N3 March 1968 12 Emily Bronte (repeat) Wuthering Heights 19/3 ENG N4 13 Ivan Turgenev 3 Pyervaya Lyubov (russkii) 19/1 RUSS N5 14 Storm 1 Der Schimmelreiter (deutsch) 19/1 GER N6 15 John Dryden (repeat) All for Love 17/1 ENG PL2 16 Bredvold 1 Milieu of John Dryden 20/4 AMER CR2 17 Marcel Proust 2 Combray (francais) 20/1 FREN N7 18 T.S. Eliot 6 The Uses of Poetry 20/5 AMER CR3

45. Forty-seven Years Of Reading (e-k) -- Richard Seltzer
41 philip jourdain 1 Nature of Mathematics 20/3 FREN SC1 1968. James Joyce.39 James Joyce 1 Portrait of Artist as a Young Man 20/1 IR N11 1965
http://www.samizdat.com/readalle.html
FORTY-SEVEN YEARS OF READING (Authors E-K)
For those who are curious, attached is a list of every book I've read cover-to-cover since 1958, when I was in the sefventh grade (the portion dealing with authors with names beginning E-K). I tend to be a bit obsessive, keeping a list of this kind. Sometimes I've added markers like (*) to indicate books I particularly liked; but I've been rather inconsistent about that. I also try to keep track of how many books of a particular kind (novel, etc.) and from a given country and century (Eng. 19th, etc.), I read each year. Richard Seltzer For reviews of some of these books, see www.samizdat.com/isyn/reviews.html For brief notes on others, see www.samizdat.com/readrev.html For more on books and reading, see www.samizdat.com/readers.html To buy a library for the price of a book, please check our online store.
BUY IT HERE. Some of the books mentioned here have hyperlinks to Amazon.com. If you might want to buy such a book, just click on the title. You'll get the usual discount and service from Amazon.com, and we'll get a small commission for the referral. That could help us pay some bills and expand what we do for you. Jaclyn Easton

46. Wittgenstein's Phd Viva - A Recreation
and when you were only 18 years old you proposed a solution to philip jourdain . See Ivor GrattanGuinness, Dear Russell - Dear jourdain (New York
http://www.royalinstitutephilosophy.org/articles/w_goldstein.htm

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Wittgenstein’s Ph.D Viva - A Re-Creation Laurence Goldstein On a first reading, ignore all footnote references and all decimal numerals in the text, which refer to propositions in Tractatus LogicoPhilosophicus [18 June, 1929; a room in Cambridge University. G. E. Moore, smoking a pipe, is pacing the room. Enter Bertrand Russell.] Russell: Good afternoon, Moore. This viva - I have never known anything so absurd in my life.[ Moore: Well, I haven’t either, Russell, but I believe I have. [ Russell: Would you like to sit here or over there? Moore: Yes.[ [Russell rolls his eyes and takes a seat. Moore then sits down.] Russell: I think we’re ready. Come in, please, Mr. Wittgenstein. [Wittgenstein enters] Russell: Please sit down. [Wittgenstein sits] Russell: As you know, we’re here to discuss your

47. Philip Morris Glossary Of Names: C
X, CABINET, LAVOIX, LAVOIX jourdain, French Patent Counsel (03/13/2000Present);Pinheiro Neto, Local Counsel for philip Morris in San Paulo,
http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/pm_gloss.C.html
Search site
Philip Morris Index
A B C ... X-Y-Z
Related Resources About Glossaries of Names About Privilege Codes Lorillard Glossary of Names Lorillard Privilege Codes ... R.J. Reynolds Privilege Codes Philip Morris Glossary of Names: C X Outside Counsel for Philip Morris-China Valuation Experts, Philip Morris/HAG Consultants C.A. Cigarrera Doble Aguila y Sport Philip Morris International Entity-Venezuela C.A. Tabacalera Nacional S.A. CANTANA, Philip Morris International Entity-Venezuela C.A. Venezolana de Tabaco Philip Morris International Entity-Venezuela (Inactive) X Legal Counsel in Greece C.P.P. Hovens Sigarenfabriek BV Independent Tobacco Manufacturer-Netherlands CAB Working Group Civil Aeronautics Board Working Group. American Tobacco Company Counsel X Counsel for Lorillard X U.S. Tobacco Counsel X French Patent Counsel Caboche, Jocelyne (Code name: Descarles) Philip Morris funded to research Neuropharmacology; University of Paris-France X Cabot, Howard Ross, Esq. Cacciotti, J.J. X Cadieux Cadieux, Chester E. III Vice President of Sales for QuikTrip Corporation ("QuikTrip") Cadieux, E.

48. McMaster University: The Bertrand Russell Research Centre / Russell Journal
I. GrattanGuinness, Russell and philip jourdain . How Russell Wrote .Michael Radner, Name Index to An Essay on the Foundations of Geometry
http://russell.mcmaster.ca/j8.htm
Russell O.s. No. 8. Winter 1972
Russell: the Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies is published by The Bertrand Russell Research Centre , McMaster University. For ordering information, including prices, see the back issues table
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Editor's Notes Katharine Tait "McMaster's Centenary Conference" I. Grattan-Guinness "Russell and Philip Jourdain" "How Russell Wrote" Michael Radner "Name Index to An Essay on the Foundations of Geometry "Recent Acquisitions: Manuscripts" Russell Research Centre Faculty of Humanities Russell Archives McMaster University Page maintained by Arlene Duncan. Last updated 2 December 2004.

49. Crossroads In Mathematics
philip EB jourdain, The Nature of Mathematics. Reprinted in The World of Mathematicsby James R. Newman, 1956, p. 4.
http://www.imacc.org/standards/standards.html
Crossroads in Mathematics
CHAPTER 2 - Standards for Introductory College Mathematics
"Another obstacle to change is the belief held by many mathematicians that the ultimate result of the current movement to revise teaching methods and curricula will be a watered-down mathematics program that is neither effective nor rigorous. They believe that many of the students who leave these courses will not have the mathematical skills necessary for our society and that mathematics majors will not have the experiences necessary for further study in graduate-level mathematics. Research in mathematics education at the collegiate level should produce evidence that students can develop rich concepts from advanced mathematics as they use technology and learn mathematics in alternative settings." Mary Kim Prichard, Mathematics Teacher , December 1993, p. 747. Mathematics and its applications should permeate the undergraduate curriculum. Mathematics programs must demonstrate connections both among topics within mathematics and between mathematics and other disciplines. Introductory college mathematics should link students' previous mathematical experiences with the mathematics necessary to be successful in careers, to be productive citizens, and to pursue lifelong learning. Adult students entering introductory college mathematics programs today bring a rich diversity of experiences. This diversity challenges educators to define clear goals and standards, develop effective instructional strategies, and present mathematics in appropriate contexts. Institutions, departments, and individual faculty must take active roles in addressing the needs of diverse students, in providing a supportive environment, and in improving curricular and instructional strategies. The standards presented in this chapter unite many different mathematical experiences and guide the development of a multidimensional mathematics program.

50. Tapestry Collection Of Philip The Bold
Based on Art from the Court of Burgundy The Patronage of philip the Bold and John jourdain de Blaye, gold thread, lot of two tapestries, 2520 francs
http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/arth214_folder/tapestries_philip_bold
Art Home ARTH Courses ARTH 214 Assignments Tapestry Collection of Philip the Bold Based on Art from the Court of Burgundy: The Patronage of Philip the Bold and John the Fearless 1364-1419, p. 125 Category Subject Matter Price Religious St. Anne, Cyprus gold thread, lot of two tapestries 1,100 gold crowns St. Anthony (two tapestries, gold thread) The Apocalypse (six tapestries), 648 square meters,gold thread 5,000 francs St. Catherine The Credo, fine Cyprus gold thread, 26.4 X 4.8 meters 1,400 francs St. Denis, fine Arras thread and Cyprus gold and silver threads 800 francs St. George, gold thread, 21 meters long 700 francs Judas Maccabeus (the deeds of), four tapestries 90 francs The Entombment of Christ, lot of two tapestries, 7 X 3.15 meters 1,000 francs The Five Joys of the Virgin, Cyprus gold thread 250 francs The Crowning of the Virgin, lot of two tapestries, gold thread, 10.15 X 4.9 meters 1,000 francs

51. Earliest Uses Of Symbols Of Set Theory And Logic
zur Begründung der transfiniten Mengenlehre translation from the German,introduction, and notes by philip Edward Bertrand jourdain (18791919).
http://members.aol.com/jeff570/set.html
Earliest Uses of Symbols of Set Theory and Logic
Last updated: May 14, 2005 The study of logic goes back more than two thousand years and in that time many symbols and diagrams have been devised. Around 300 BC Aristotle introduced letters as term-variables, a "new and epoch-making device in logical technique." (W. & M. Kneale The Development of Logic (1962, p. 61). The modern era of mathematical notation in logic began with George Boole (1815-1864), although none of his notation survives. Set theory came into being in the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries, largely a creation of Georg Cantor (1845-1918). See MacTutor's A history of set theory or, for more detail, Set theory from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Most of the basic symbols of logic and set theory in use today were introduced between 1880 and 1920. The main contributors were Ernst Schröder Giuseppe Peano Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947) and Bertrand Russell (1872-1970). Peano had a strong influence on Whitehead and Russell and their joint work, Principia Mathematica (1910-1913), was itself very influential. Today

52. Earliest Known Uses Of Some Of The Words Of Mathematics (C)
as shown in the following passage from philip jourdain s translation (Contributionsto Curiously, at the end of his Introduction jourdain says that
http://members.aol.com/jeff570/c.html
Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (C)
Last revision: July 28, 2005 CALCULUS. In Latin calculus means "pebble." It is the diminutive of calx, meaning a piece of limestone. The counters of a Roman abacus were originally made of stone and called calculi . (Smith vol. 2, page 165). In Latin, persons who did counting were called calculi. Teachers of calculation were known as calculones if slaves, but calculatores or numerarii if of good family (Smith vol. 2, page 166). The Romans used calculos subducere for "to calculate." In Late Latin calculare means "to calculate." This word is found in the works of the poet Aurelius Clemens Prudentius, who lived in Spain c. 400 (Smith vol. 2, page 166). Calculus in English, defined as a system or method of calculating, is dated 1666 in MWCD10, presumably from (in Number 21 Philosophical Transactions , Vol. 1, (1665 - 1666), p. 369. In its early days the Philosophical Transactions published articles in Latin as well as in English and calculus often appeared in the Latin articles.

53. HISTORIA MATHEMATICA VOLUME 6, PAGES 351490, NOVEMBER 1979
460464 Dear RussellDear jourdain. A Commentary on Russell s Logic, Based onhis Correspondence with philip jourdain, by I. GrattanGuinness (Ignacio
http://www.math.uu.nl/ichm/hm/06351490.html

Volume Index

Previous
VOLUME 6, PAGES 351490, NOVEMBER 1979
BOOK REVIEWS History of Non-Euclidean Geometry. The Development of the Concept of Geometric Space , by B. A. Rozenfeld (Boris M. Schein) ............................................... 460464 Dear RussellDear Jourdain. A Commentary on Russell's Logic, Based on his Correspondence with Philip Jourdain , by I. Grattan-Guinness (Ignacio Angelelli) ............................................. 464466 A Critical Study of the Yang Hui Suan Fa; A Thirteenth-Century Chinese Mathematical Treatise , by Lam Lay Yong (Joseph Needham) ................................................ 466468 Felix Klein and Sophus Lie , by I. M. Yaglom (Samuel Kotz) ................................................... 468469 Nikolai Ivanovich Fuss: 17551826 , by V. I. Lysenko (Esther R. Phillips) ............................................ 469472 ABSTRACTS ............................................................. 473479 INDEX OF AUTHORS OF ARTICLES AND REVIEWS IN VOLUME 6 .......................................................... 486 INDEX OF AUTHORS OF PUBLICATIONS REVIEWED AND ABSTRACTED IN VOLUME 6 ...................................... 487490
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54. Ludwig Wittgenstein: Norway
With philip jourdain, a mathematician and friend of Russell’s, he worked on thefirst translation of parts of Frege’s Grundgesetze der Arithmetik.
http://www.wittgen-cam.ac.uk/cgi-bin/text/biogre4.html
Ludwig Wittgenstein: Norway
Background The Early Years Cambridge Norway ... Final Years
The Science of Logic by P. Coffey, in The Cambridge Review - A Journal of University Life and Thought. Grundgesetze der Arithmetik. Jourdain published these between 1915 and 1917 under his name in the philosophical journal The Monist, Notes on Logic, as Appendix 1 in Notebooks, 1914-1916, Oxford 1961. In mid-October, following the summer holidays, Wittgenstein set preparations in motion for settling in Norway. He wanted to escape what in his eyes was the atmosphere of superficial intellectualising in Cambridge. At the end of October he took a room in a guest-house in Skjolden, a small remote place northeast of Bergen, where he intended to spend the winter in lonely contemplation of questions of logic. This stay was broken only by a short Christmas visit to the family in Vienna. Postcard to Eccles. 1931
Notebooks, 1914-1916.
Other manuscripts by Wittgenstein from this period, of which he speaks for example in his letters to Russell, cannot be found, such as the paper entitled Logic, intended as a dissertation for his B.A. degree. These were presumably destroyed by Wittgenstein himself, as it is known a large part of his other manuscripts were, which he did not regard as substantial parts of his work. It is in this respect that the Wittgenstein papers differ from others, with their usual drafts, sketches and preliminary work. The literary papers that Ludwig Wittgenstein left constitute his complete works, albeit with the fragmentary structure reflecting its organic growth, which causes considerable problems for any editor.

55. Aaron Abbess Abbot Of Westminister Abergavenny, George Abhorson
Robert Falconbridge, philip Falstaff, Sir John Fastolfe, Sir John Father Don John, King Joseph jourdain, Margery Julia Juliet Juliet Juno Jupiter
http://www.sensorysoftware.com/resources/wordbanks/Shakespeare Characters.bnk
Aaron Abbess Abbot of Westminister Abergavenny, George Abhorson Abram Achilles Adam Adrian (Volsce) Adrian Adriana Aedile Aemilius Aeneas Agamemmon Agrippa, Vipsanius Ajax Alarbus Albany Alcibiades Alencon, John Alexander Alexas Alice Aliena Alonso, King Amiens Aguecheek, Sir Andrew Andromache Andronicus, Marcus Andronicus, Titus Angelo Angelo Angus Anne (Anne Boleyn) Anne (Page) Anne, Lady Antenor Anthony Antigonus Antiochus Antipholus of Syracuse Antipholus of Ephesus Antonio Antonio Antonio Antonio Antonio Antony, Mark Apemantus Apothecary Apparitions Archbishop of Canterbury Archbishop of Canterbury (Thomas Cranmer) Archbishop of York (Scroop) Archbishop of York (Rotherham) Archidamus Arcite Ariel Armado, Don Adriano de Aragon Artemidorus Artesius Arthur, Prince Arviragus Asnath Audrey Aufidius, Tullus Aumerle Austria, Limoges Autolycus Bagot, Sir John Balthasar Balthasar Balthasar Balthasar Bandit(s) Banquo Baptista Bardolph Bardolph, Lord Thomas Barnardine Barnardo Bartholomew Bassanio Basset Bassianus Bastard (Philip Faulconbridge) Bastard (of Orleans) Bastard Bates, John Bavian Bawd Beadle Beatrice Beaumont Bedford (John Plantagenet) Begger Belarius Belch, Sir Toby Benedick Benvolio Berkeley Berkeley, Lord Berowne Berri Bertram Bevis, George Bianca Bianca Bigot, Roger Biondello Bishop(s) Blanche of Spain Blunt, Sir James Blunt, Sir John Blunt, Sir Walter Boatswain Bolingbroke, Henry Bolingbroke, Roger Bona, Lady Borachio Bottom, Nick Boult Bourbon, Jean Bourbon, Lewis Boyet Brabantio Brakenbury, Robert Brandon, Sir William Brandon Bretagne, Jean Brother Brother Brother Brutus, Decius Brutus, Junius Brutus, Junius Brutus, Marcus Buckingham (Henry Stafford) Buckingham (Edward Stafford) Buckingham (Humphrey Stafford) Bullcalf, Peter Burgundy Burgundy (Philip) Bushy Butcher Butts, Doctor Cade, Jack Cadwal Caesar, Julius Caesar, Octavius Caius (Ligarius) Caius Caius, Doctor Caius (Kent) Calchas Caliban Calpurnia Camillo Campeius Canidius Canterbury (Henry Chichele) Canterbury (Thomas Cranmer) Caphis Capuchius, Lord Capulet Capulet, Lady Capulet, Cousin Cardinal (Henry Beaufort) Cardinal (Thomas Bourchier) Cardinal (Wolsey) Cardinal (Campeius) Cardinal (Pandulph) Carpenter Casca, Publius Cassandra Cassio Cassius Catesby, Sir William Cathness Catling, Simon Cato Celia Ceres Cerimon, Lord Cesario Chamberlain Chamberlain Chancellor Charles Charles VI (of France) Charles VII (of France) Charmian Chatillon Chief Justice Chiron Chorus Chorus Cicero Cinna Cinna (the Younger) Clarence Clarence (Thomas) Claudio Claudio Claudius Claudius, King of Denmark Cleomenes Cleon Cleopatra Clerk Clifford, Lord John Clifford, Lord Thomas Clitus Cloten Clown Clown Clown(s) Clown Clown Clown Clown Cobbler Cobweb Colevile, Sir John Collatine Cominius Commoner(s) Commoner(s) Conrade Conspirators Constable (of France) Constance Cordelia Corin Coriolanus, Martius Cornelius Cornelius Cornwall Costard Countess (of Rossillion) Countrymen Court, Alexander Courtsean Cranmer, Thomas Cressida Crier Cromwell, Thomas Cupid Curan Curio Curtis Cymbeline Dardanius Daughter Daughter Dauphin (Lewis) Dauphin (Lewis) Dauphin (Charles) Davy Decius Decretas Deiphobus Demetrius Demetrius Demetrius Dennis Denny, Sir Anthony Derby Desdemona Diana Dick the Butcher Diomedes Diomedes Dion Dionyza Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor of Divinity Dogberry Dolabella Doll Tearsheet Don John Don Pedro Donalbain Dorcas Doricles Dorset (Marquis) Douglas (Earl of) Drawer Dromio of Syracuse Dromio of Ephesus Duchess (of Gloucester) Duchess (of Gloucester) Duchess (of York) Duchess (of York) Duke Frederick Duke (of Milan) Duke Orsino Duke Senior Duke (of Venice) Duke (of Florence) Duke (of Venice) Duke Solinus Duke (of Vienna) Dull, Anthony Dumaine Duncan, King of Scotland Dutchman Edgar Edmund Edward IV Egeon Egeus Eglamour Egyptian Elbow Eleanor (Queen) Elizabeth I Elizabeth (Woodville) Ely (Bishop) Ely, John Emilia Emilia Emilia Emilia Emmanuel Enobarbus Eros Erpingham, Sir Thomas Escalus, Prince Escalus Escanes Essex Euphronius Evans, Sir Hugh Executioner Executioner Executioner Exeter (Duke of) Exeter (Duke of) Exton, Sir Piers Fabian Fairies Falconbridge, Lady Falconbridge, Lord Falconbridge, Robert Falconbridge, Philip Falstaff, Sir John Fastolfe, Sir John Father Feeble, Francis Fenton Ferdinand Ferdinand Feste Fiend Fitzwater, Lord Walter Flaminius Flavius Flavius Fleance Florizel Fluellen Flute Fool Fool Ford, Frank Ford, Mistress Alice Forester Fortinbras France (King of) France (Princess of) France (Queen Isabella of) France (King Charles VI of) Francesca Francis Francisco Francisco Frederick French Soldier Frenchman Friar Friar John Friar Laurence Friar Francis Friend Froth Gadshill Gallus Gardener Gardiner, Stephen Garter Gaunt, John of General George (Duke of Clarence) George Gertrude Ghost Ghost Ghost Ghost (Banquo) Girl (Margaret) Glansdale, Sir William Glendower, Owen Gloucester (Earl of) Gloucester (Duchess of) Gloucester (Duke of) Gloucester (Duchess of) Gloucester (Richard III) Gloucester (Thomas, Duke of) Gobbo, Launcelot Gobbo, Old Goneril Gonzalo Governor of Harfleur Governor of Paris Gower Gower, John Gower Grandpre Gratiano Gratiano Greene, Henry Gregory Gremio Grey, Lady Grey, Sir Richard Grey, Thomas Griffith Groom Groom Grumio Guardsmen Guiderius Guildenstern Guilford, Sir Henry Gurney, James Haberdasher Hal, Prince Halberdier Hamlet Harcourt Harpy Hastings, Pursuivant Hastings, Lord Ralph Hastings, Lord William Headsman Hecate Hector Helen Helen Helena Helenus Helicanus Henry, Prince Henry IV Henry V Henry VI Henry VIII Herbert, Sir Walter VI Hermia Hermione Hero Hippolyta Hippolyta Holland, Henry Holland, John Holofernes Horatio Horner, Thomas Hortensio Hortensius Host Host Hostess Hostess Hostilius Hotspur Hubert Huntsman Huntsman Hymen Hymen Iachimo Iago Imogen Iras Iris Isabel, (of England) Isabel (of France) Isabella Isidore's Servant Jamy Jaquenetta Jaques Jaques de Boys Jessica Jeweller Joan of Arc John, Don John, King Joseph Jourdain, Margery Julia Juliet Juliet Juno Jupiter Justice Katharine Katharine Katherina Katherine of Aragon Kent, Earl of King Alonso King Antiochus King Charles VII King Charles VI King Claudius King Cymbeline King Duncan King Edward IV King Henry IV King Henry V King Henry VI King Henry VIII Lady Macbeth Lady Faulconbridge Lady Macduff Lady Mortimer Lady Northumberland Lady Percy Laertes Lafew, Lord Lamprius Lance Lartius, Titus Launce Launcelot Laurence, Friar Lavatch Lavinia Lawyer Le Beau Lear Legate Lennox Leonardo Leonato Leonine Leontes Lepidus, Marcus Lewis, the Dauphin Lewis, the Dauphin Lewis, King of France Licio Lieutenant Lieutenant Lieutenant Ligarius, Caius Lincoln Litio (Licio) Lodovico Lodowick Longaville Lord Bardolph Lord Chamberlain Lord Chancellor Lord Marshal Lorenzo Lovell, Sir Francis Lovell, Sir Thomas Luce Lucentio Lucetta Luciana Lucianus Lucilius Lucilius Lucillius Lucio Lucius Lucius Lucius Lucius' Servant Lucrece Lucretius Lucullus Lucy, Sir William Lychorida Lysander Lysimachus Mab Macbeth Macduff Macmorris Maecenas, Gaius Malcolm Malvolio Mamilius Marcade Marcellus Marcus Andronicus Mardian Margarelon Margaret of Anjou Margaret Margery Jourdain Maria Maria Mariana Mariana Marina Mariner Mariner Marshal Marshal Martext, Sir Oliver Martius Martius Marullus Master Master Master gunner Mate Mayor of Coventry Mayor of London Mayor of London Mayor of Albans Mayor of York Melun Menas Menecrates Menelaus Menenius Agrippa Menteth Mercer Merchant Merchant Mercutio Metellus Michael Michael Miranda Mistress Alice Ford Mistress Overdone Mistress Margaret Page Mistress Quickly Montague Montague, Lady Montague Montano Montgomery Montjoy Mopsa Morgan Morocco Mopsa Mortimer Mortimer, Edmund Mortimer, Sir Hugh Mortimer, Lady Mortimer, Sir John Morton Moth Moth Mother Mouldy, Ralph Mowbray, Thomas Mowbray, Thomas Murellus Mustardseed Mutius Myrmidon Nathaniel Nathaniel Neighbour Nell Nell Nerissa Nestor Nicholas Nobleman Norfolk Norfolk Norfolk Norfolk Northumberland Northumberland Northumberland Northumberland, Lady Northumberland, Siward Nun Nurse Nurse Nurse Nym Oatcake, Hugh Oberon Octavia Octavius Old Athenian Old Clifford Old Gobbo Old Lady Old Man Oliver Olivia Ophelia Orlando Orleans, Charles Duke of Orsino Orsic Ostler Oswald Othello Outlaws Oxford Page, Anne Page, Mistress Margaret Page, William Painter Palamon Pandar Pandarus Pandulph Panthino Paris Paris Parolles Patience Patroclus Paulina Peaseblossom Pedant Pedro, Don Pembroke, William Pembroke Penker, Friar Percy, Henry Percy, Henry Percy, Thomas Percy, Lady Perdita Pericles Peter Peter Peter Peter of Pomfret Peter, Friar Peto Petruchio (Ghost) Petruchio Phebe Philario Philemon Philip Philip Augustus Philip Philo Philostrate Philotus Phrynia Pinch, Dr Pindarus Pirates Pirthous Pisanio Pistol Plantagenet, Richard Plantagenet, Richard Player King Player Queen Players Players Plebeians Plebians Poet Poet Poins, Ned Polixenes Polonius Pompey, Bum 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William William Page Williams, Michael Willoughby, William Winchester, Bishop of Winchester, Bishop of Witches Within Wolsey, Thomas Cardinal Woman Woman Wooer Worcester, Earl of Yorick York, Duchess of York, Duchess of York, Duke of York, Duke of York, Duke of York, Duke of York, Archbishop of York, Archbishop of Young Cato Young Clifford Young Lucius Young Siward Young Talbot

56. 01240cam 22003011
of logic hcomputer file, cby Louis Couturat ; authorized English translationby Lydia Gillingham Robinson, with a preface by philip EB jourdain.
http://www.library.cornell.edu/cts/marcrecordsets/DigitalMathBooks/DigitalMathBo

57. TOC For The World Of Mathematics
philip EB jourdain Commentary, 2. 1. The Nature of Mathematics. by philip EBjourdain, 4. PART Il Historical and Biographical. Commentary, 74
http://www.project2061.org/publications/rsl/online/TRADEBKS/TOCS/WORLMATH.HTM
Table of Contents for The World of Mathematics
Introduction vii VOLUME ONE PART I: General Survey Philip E. B. Jourdain: Commentary 1. The Nature of Mathematics by PHILIP E. B. JOURDAIN PART Il: Historical and Biographical Commentary 1. The Great Mathematicians by HERBERT WESTREN TURNBULL Commentary 2. The Rhind Papyrus by JAMES R. NEWMAN Commentary 3. Archimedes by PLUTARCH, VITRUVIUS, TZETZES Commentary 4. Greek Mathematics by IVOR THOMAS Robert Recorde: Commentary 5. The Declaration of the Profit of Arithmeticke by ROBERT RECORDE Kepler and Lodge: Commentary 6. Johann Kepler by SIR OLIVER LODGE Descartes and Analytical Geometry: Commentary 7. The Geometry by RENE DESCARTES Commentary 8. Isaac Newton by E. N. DA C. ANDRADE 9. Newton, the Man by JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES Bishop Berkeley and Infinitesimals: Commentary 10. The Analyst by BISHOP BERKELEY Gauss: Commentary 11. Gauss, the Prince of Mathematicians by ERIC TEMPLE BELL Cayley and Sylvester: Commentary 12. Invariant Twins, Cayley and Sylvester by ERIC TEMPLE BELL Commentary 13. Srinivasa Ramanujan by JAMES R. NEWMAN

58. Author Index, Vols. 1 - 5
jourdain, philip EB Richard Dedekind (1833 1916), Modern Logic 3 (1993), 207 -214. Kormin, Henry Preserving the Church and Bernays typescripts a case
http://homepages.ed.ac.uk/pmilne/ml/author.html
Modern Logic
Author Index for Volumes 1 - 5, complete
A B C - D E - F ... V - Z
Abeles, Francine F.
Lewis Carroll's method of trees: its origins in Studies in Logic Modern Logic Herbrand's Fundamental Theorem and the beginning of logic programming Modern Logic See also Author Index for Volumes 6 - 8
Amnell, Marko
Review of Revolutions in Mathematics , edited by Donald Gillies Modern Logic
Anellis, Irving H.
Introducing Modern Logic Modern Logic Editor's Note: A history of logic trees Modern Logic From semantic tableaux to Smullyan trees: the history of the falsifiability tree method Modern Logic Modern Logic William P. Hanf Modern Logic (compiler), Hanf's bibliography Modern Logic Editor's Note: Burgin and the theory of named sets Modern Logic Kant, axiomatics, logic and geometry: Review of Immanuel Kant, Logic Modern Logic Forty years of "unnatural" natural deduction and quantification: A history of first-order systems of natural deduction, from Gentzen to Copi Modern Logic A Note and Correction on Zbigniew Lis' Contribution to the Tree Method Modern Logic Editor's introduction, Special issue on Jean van Heijenoort

59. Contents, Volume 8
R. Gregory TAYLOR, Review of philip Ehrlich (ed. John C. SIMMS, Review ofphilip EB jourdain, Selected Essays on the History of Set Theory and Logics
http://homepages.ed.ac.uk/pmilne/ml/abs8.html
Modern Logic
Contents and abstracts for Modern Logic Volume 8 (1998-2001)
Modern Logic 8 Leo CORRY The Origins of the Definition of Abstract Rings Modern Logic
R.M. DIMITRIC
Algebraic Equivalents of Kurepa's Hypothesis Modern Logic
Kurepa trees have proved to be a very useful concept with ever growing applications in diverse mathematical areas. We give a brief survey of equivalent statements in algebra, particularly in valuated vector spaces, abelian p -groups and non-abelian periodic groups. The survey is prefaced by an outline of the illustrious history of Kurepa's Hypothesis. An interesting aspect of the work in this area is the equivalence (via Kurepa's Hypotheses) of some statements in abelian group theory with statements in non-abelian group theory. This kind of relationship would be hard to establish without Kurepa trees. The goal of the paper is to alert as well as familiarize the reader with this active research amalgam of set theory and algebra, but also to entice at least some to take part in the work. Yvon GAUTHIER The Internal Consistency of Arithmetic with Infinite Descent Modern Logic
Ignacio ANGELELLI
Review of W.D. Hart (ed.)

60. CHC Digital: Online Resources For Cuban And Cuban American Studies
Note Autograph letter signed from Mary Hench, wife of Dr. philip S. Hench (18961965), Note Autograph letter signed by Francis jourdain (1876-1958),
http://digital.library.miami.edu/chcdigital/chc0339/chc0339_s1b1.shtml
CHC Collections Lydia Cabrera Collection Lydia Cabrera Collection TABLE OF CONTENTS Overview Administrative Information Biographical/Historical Note Series Descriptions Container List Series I: Correspondence,
n.d., 1910-[1991?] Sub-series A: From Lydia Cabrera,
n.d., 1910-1984
Sub-series B: To Lydia Cabrera,
n.d. 1929-[1991?]
n.d., 1929-1990
Select Correspondents: A-M
Select Correspondents: N-V Series II: Personal Papers, n.d.,1916-1996 Contact Information:
Cuban Heritage Collection
Otto G. Richter Library
University of Miami
P.O. Box 248214
Coral Gables, FL. 33124-0320
edevaron@miami.edu

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