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         Rota Gian-carlo:     more books (91)
  1. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society [Volume 74 Number 2 March 1968] by Gian-Carlo [ed.] ; Protter, M.H. [ed.] ; Gerstenhaber, Murray [ed.] Rota, 1968-01-01
  2. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society Volume 76, No.5 March, 1970 by Rota, Gian-Carlo, M.H. Protter, and Murray Gerstenhaber, 1970
  3. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society Vol. 74, Number 6. by Gian-Carlo, M. H. Protter, Murray Gerstenhaber, editors Rota, 1111-01-01
  4. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society [Volume 78 Number 3 Issue 739 May 1972] by Gian-Carlo [ed.] ; Protter, M.H. [ed.] ; Weinberger, Hans F. [ed.] Rota, 1972-01-01
  5. Discrete Thoughts by Mark/ Rota, Gian-Carlo/ Schwartz, Jacob T. Kac, 2008-01-11
  6. on the Foundations of Combinatorial Theory: Combinatorial Geometrics by Henry & Rota, Gian-Carlo Crapo, 1976
  7. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, Volume 76 by Gian-Carlo, M.H. Protter and Murray Gerstenhaber, editors Rota, 1970-01-01
  8. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society [Volume 79 Number 4 Issue 745 July 1973] by Gian-Carlo [ed.] ; Kelley, John L. [ed.] ; Weinberger, Hans F. [ed.] Rota, 1973
  9. The Selected Papers of Norman Levinson (Contemporary Mathematicians)
  10. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society (Vol. 28, No. 2, March 1972, Issue 737) by Gian-Carlo; Protter, M.H.; Weinberger, Hans F. (Editors) Rota, 1972-01-01
  11. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society [Volume 79 Number 1 Issue 742 January 1973] by Gian-Carlo [ed.] ; Kelley, John L. [ed.] ; Weinberger, Hans F. [ed.] Rota, 1973
  12. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 78, No. 3 by Gian-Carlo Rota, 1972-01-01
  13. Studies in Applied Math: A Volume Dedicated to Irving Segal
  14. Vigevano: People From Vigevano, Gian-Carlo Rota, Eleonora Duse, Ludovico Sforza, Bona Sforza, Andrea Soncin, Guido Da Vigevano, Carlo Barone

41. AIM Reprint Library:
1. On the Combinatorics of the Symmetric Group Doubilet, Peter rota, giancarlo Doubilet, Peter rota, gian-carlo Stanley, Richard
http://www.aimath.org/library/library.cgi?database=reprints;mode=display;BrowseT

42. AIM Reprint Library:
3. Enumerative Combinatorics Hetyei, Gabor rota, giancarlo 8. Lecture Notes October 14, 1992 Hetyei, Gabor rota, gian-carlo
http://www.aimath.org/library/library.cgi?database=reprints;mode=display;BrowseT

43. Gian-Carlo Rota On The Teaching Of Differential Equations
giancarlo rota on the Teaching of Differential Equations. gian-carlo rota (1932-1999) was a mathematician of the first rank, as well as one of my own
http://euler.slu.edu/Dept/Faculty/marks/Pedagogy/RotaOnTeachingODEs.html
Gian-Carlo Rota on the Teaching of Differential Equations
Gian-Carlo Rota: "Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Learned Before I Started Teaching Differential Equations"

44. Untitled Document
rota, giancarlo - Died in 1999, gian-carlo rota was Professor of Mathematics at the rota, gian-carlo, Indiscrete Thoughts , Birkäuser, 1997
http://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/mind/topics/00000032past.htm
SWIF Philosophy of Mind updated: 24 June 2001 http://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/mind/topics phenom.htm
Topics
Phenomenology and Cognitive Science Eugenio Borrelli State University of Milan (Italy)
euborre@tin.it
This page collects international resources on the intersection between phenomenology of Husserlian kind or origin and the new (neuro-)cognitive science, a non-reductionist science of cognition which takes consciousness seriously. This bibliography has been inspired by the book " Petitot, J.-Varela, F.-Pachoud, B.- Roy J.M. (editors.), Naturalizing phenomenology . Issues in contemporary phenomenology and cognitive science , Standford University Press, Standford (California), 1999". The page contains also some international Phenomenology Resources (archives, sites, institutes) Bibliography Phenomenology Resources Journal Bibliography A B C D E ... H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z B Elisabeth Baumgartner, Wilhelm Baumgartner, Bojan Borstner, Matjaz Potrc, John Shawe-Taylor and Elizabeth Valentine (Eds.)

45. Letter To The Editor
Three Lessons I Wish I Had Never Been Taught by giancarlo rota. I have the greatest admiration for gian-carlo rota s mathematics, energy, talent, wit,
http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~nevai/MYMATH/PUBLICATIONS/rota_letter_ams_notice
Notices of the AMS
March 1997
Three Lessons I Wish I Had Never Been Taught by Gian-Carlo Rota
I have the greatest admiration for Gian-Carlo Rota's mathematics, energy, talent, wit, personality, charisma, enthusiasm, and the list could (and perhaps should) be continued. However, the purpose of this letter is to point out that by publishing his ``Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Been Taught'' in the January 1997 issue of the AMS Notices (cf. p. 22-25) without any appropriate footnote indicating that some of the ``lessons'' are meant to be just read and enjoyed and must not be taken seriously without parental supervision, you (and, indirectly, Gian-Carlo Rota) may have caused irreparable damage to a large segment of our young (and not so young) mathematicians who are naive beyond belief and who will accept any advice no matter how absurd and nonsensical it is from such an international authority and supernova as Gian-Carlo Rota. By the way, Gian-Carlo Rota writes, ``I bought a copy of Frederick Riesz's Collected Papers as soon as the big, thick, heavy, oversize volume was published.'' I wonder if he realizes that he was grossly cheated, because it's really

46. Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Been Taught
Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Been Taught. giancarlo rotanote ISBN 0-8176-3866-0,Indiscrete Thoughts by gian-carlo rota, edited by Fabrizio Palombi .
http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~nevai/MYMATH/rota_ams_notices_01_97.html
Notices of the AMS
January 1997
Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Been Taught
Gian-Carlo Rota [note]
Indiscrete Thoughts by Gian-Carlo Rota, edited by Fabrizio Palombi . Allow me to begin by allaying one of your worries. I will not spend the next half hour thanking you for participating in this conference or for your taking time away from work to travel to Cambridge. And to allay another of your probable worries, let me add that you are not about to be subjected to a recollection of past events similar to the ones I've been publishing for some years with a straight face and an occasional embellishment of reality. Dirk Struik was right: a speaker should try to give his audience something they can take home. But what? I have been collecting some random bits of advice that I keep repeating to myself, do's and don'ts of which I have been and will always be guilty. Some of you have been exposed to one or more of these tidbits. Collecting these items and presenting them in one speech may be one of the less obnoxious among options of equal presumptuousness. The advice we give others is the advice that we ourselves need. Since it is too late for me to learn these lessons, I will discharge my unfulfilled duty by dishing them out to you. They will be stated in order of increasing controversiality.
Lecturing
The following four requirements of a good lecture do not seem to be altogether obvious, judging from the mathematics lectures I have been listening to for the past forty-six years.

47. Fine Hall In Its Golden Age: Remembrances Of Princeton In The Early Fifties, By
giancarlo rota was born in Italy, where he went to school through the ninth grade. gian-carlo rota. *The present article is a draft for a chapter of a
http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/finding_aids/mathoral/pmcxr
A Century of Mathematics in America, Part III, History of Mathematics, Volume 3, P. Duren, Ed., pp.223-236, American Mathematical Society, 1989. Gian-Carlo Rota was born in Italy, where he went to school through the ninth grade. He attended high school in Quito, Ecuador, and entered Princeton University as a freshman in 1950. Three years later, he graduated summa cum laude and went to Yale, where he received a Ph.D. in 1956 with a thesis in functional analysis under the direction ofJ. T. Schwartz. After a position at Harvard, in 1959 he moved to MIT, where he is now professor of mathematics and philosophy. He has made basic contributions to operator theory, ergodic theory, and combinatorics. The AMS recently honored him with a Steele Prize for his seminal work in algebraic combinatorics. He is a senior fellow of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
Fine Hall in its golden age: Remembrances of Princeton in the early fifties*
GIAN-CARLO ROTA [*The present article is a draft for a chapter of a book which the author is under contract to write for the Sloan science series. ]

48. Gian-Carlo Rota -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
giancarlo rota (April 27, 1932 – April 18, 1999, known as Juan Carlos rota to Spanish speakers) was an (A native or inhabitant of Italy) Italian-born
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/g/gi/gian-carlo_rota1.htm
Gian-Carlo Rota
[Categories: Italian-Americans, Italian philosophers, Italian mathematicians, Combinatorists, American philosophers, American mathematicians, 20th century mathematicians, 20th Century philosophers, 1999 deaths, 1932 births]
Gian-Carlo Rota Juan Carlos Rota to Spanish speakers) was an (A native or inhabitant of Italy) Italian -born American (A person skilled in mathematics) mathematician and (A specialist in philosophy) philosopher
He was born in (Click link for more info and facts about Vigevano) Vigevano (A republic in southern Europe on the Italian Peninsula; was the core of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire between the 4th century BC and the 5th century AD) Italy , where he lived until he was 13 years old. At that time his family fled Italy because his father, Giovanni Rota, was likely to be an object of (An adherent of fascism or other right-wing authoritarian views) fascist persecution.
He attended the (Click link for more info and facts about Colegio Americano de Quito) Colegio Americano de Quito in (A republic in northwestern South America; became independent from Spain in 1822; the landscape is dominated by the Andes)

49. Umbral Calculus -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
Another combinatorialist, giancarlo rota, pointed out that the mystery vanishes if one Steven Roman and gian-carlo rota, The Umbral Calculus ,
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/u/um/umbral_calculus.htm
Umbral calculus
In (A science (or group of related sciences) dealing with the logic of quantity and shape and arrangement) mathematics , before the (The decade from 1970 to 1979) , the term umbral calculus was understood to mean the surprising similarities between otherwise unrelated polynomial equations, and certain shadowy techniques that can be used to 'prove' them. These techniques were introduced in the 19th century and are sometimes called Blissard's symbolic method , and sometimes attributed to (Click link for more info and facts about James Joseph Sylvester) James Joseph Sylvester , who used the technique extensively, or to (Click link for more info and facts about Edouard Lucas) Edouard Lucas
In the 1930s and 1940s, (Click link for more info and facts about Eric Temple Bell) Eric Temple Bell attempted to set the umbral calculus on a rigorous footing, perhaps not altogether successfully.
In the (The decade from 1970 to 1979) , Steven Roman, (Click link for more info and facts about Gian-Carlo Rota) Gian-Carlo Rota , and others developed the umbral calculus by means of (Click link for more info and facts about linear functional) linear functional s on spaces of polynomials. Currently

50. Institut Für Wissenschaftliches Rechnen
rota, giancarlo. Discrete Thoughts. Essays on Mathematics, Science, and Philo Indiscrete Thoughts. Rottner, Thomas
http://www.wire.tu-bs.de/bib/wirbib/autorenindex/r.html
TU Braunschweig Informatik
Institut
Mitarbeiter ...
Unibibliothek
Autorenindex "R"
A B C D ... Q R S T U V ... Z

51. Gian-Carlo Rota
Subject giancarlo rota; From Michele Benzi benzi@c3serve.c3.lanl.gov ; Date Thu, 22 Apr 1999 093930 -0600 (MDT)
http://www.csc.fi/math_topics/Mail/NANET99-2/msg00043.html
Message Prev Message Next Message Index
Gian-Carlo Rota
http://www-math.mit.edu/~rota/ Michele Benzi Scientific Computing Group, CIC-19 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos, New Mexico (USA) benzi@lanl.gov

52. Gian Carlo Rota
Look for Gian Carlo rota in Wiktionary, our sister dictionary project. Look for Gian Carlo rota in the Commons, our repository for free images, music,
http://www.algebra.com/algebra/about/history/Gian-Carlo-Rota.wikipedia
Gian Carlo Rota
Regular View Dictionary View (all words explained) Algebra Help my dictionary with pronunciation , wikipedia etc Wikimedia needs your help in its 21-day fund drive. See our fundraising page
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Gian Carlo Rota
Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gian_Carlo_Rota

53. Historia Matematica Mailing List Archive: [HM] Gian-Carlo Rota
Next message Samuel S. Kutler Re HM giancarlo rota ; Previous message vkatz@udc.edu HM Mathematical physics and my book ; Next in thread Samuel
http://sunsite.utk.edu/math_archives/.http/hypermail/historia/apr99/0138.html
[HM] Gian-Carlo Rota
Robert Tragesser RTragesser@compuserve.com
Tue, 20 Apr 1999 21:21:21 -0400
Gian-Carlo Rota has died.
RTragesser

54. Historia Matematica Mailing List Archive: [HM] Gian-Carlo Rota
There is an obituary of giancarlo rota with a photograph in today s 1 May New York Times on page A 15. At MIT he had a dual position in applied
http://sunsite.utk.edu/math_archives/.http/hypermail/historia/may99/0004.html
[HM] Gian-Carlo Rota
Samuel S. Kutler s-kutler@sjca.edu
Sat, 1 May 1999 08:32:36 +0100
Friends:
There is an obituary of Gian-Carlo Rota with a photograph in today's [1 May]
New York Times on page A 15.
At M.I.T. he had a dual position in applied mathematics and philosophy.
His philosophic interests centered on the existential thoughts
of . . . Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger.
In his
Indiscrete Thoughts . . . his purpose was to debunk "the myth of
monolithic personalilty" in his profession, although not all of
his subjects were pleased with their portraits. Best wishes, Sam Kutler

55. Supersymmetric Hilbert Space.
rota, giancarlo.; Stein, Joel A. Standard basis in supersymplectic algebras. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1989 Apr;86(8)2521–2524. Free Full text in PMC
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=53323

56. Auteur - Rota, Gian-Carlo
Translate this page rota, gian-carlo rota, Gian Carlo rota, G.-C. rota, GC rota, gian-carlo CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY , 1963, 62 p.
http://www.math.univ-rennes1.fr/bibli/catalogue/Auteur.htm?numrec=06102948092012

57. Liste Documents
Translate this page rota, gian-carlo 9 documents trouvés rota, gian-carlo CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY , 1963, 62 p.
http://www.math.univ-rennes1.fr/bibli/catalogue/Listdocument.htm?Lastlist=3&Rang

58. Rota.htm
Front row Wungkum Fong, Yong Chen, Mark Skandera, Arvind Sankar, giancarlo rota, Li He, Chak Chow, Yong Cheng. Ole Nielsen, gian-carlo rota.
http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~mskan/pix/rota/rota.htm
Brunch with Rota
Back row: Luo Wei, Thomas Britz, Lizhao Zhang, Federico Ardila, Ole Nielsen, Peter Clifford. Front row: Wungkum Fong, Yong Chen, Mark Skandera, Arvind Sankar, Gian-Carlo Rota, Li He, Chak Chow, Yong Cheng.
Ole Nielsen, Gian-Carlo Rota.
Return to Photo Album Table of Contents
Return to Mark's Home Page
Return to Michigan Department of Mathematics

59. Who S Who(3)
rota, giancarlo, 1932-1999. The Forbidden City of gian-carlo rota. http//www.rota.org/. Rothschild, Bruce. http//www.math.ucla.edu/~blr/
http://www.combinatorics.net/who/r.html

60. Gian-Carlo Rota. Ten Lessons I Wish I Had Learned Before
by giancarlo rota Professor of Applied Mathematics and Philosophy Massachusetts Institute of Technology rota delivered the following invited address at the
http://www.ega-math.narod.ru/Tasks/GCRota.htm
source: http://euler.slu.edu/Dept/Faculty/marks/Pedagogy/RotaOnTeachingDifflEqns.pdf
Ten Lessons I Wish
I Had Learned Before
I Started Teaching
Differential Equations
by Gian-Carlo Rota
Professor of Applied Mathematics and Philosophy
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Rota delivered the following invited address at the meeting of the Mathematical Association of America at Simmons College on April 24, 1997.
One of many mistakes of my youth was writing a textbook in ordinary differential equations. It set me back several years in my career in mathematics. However, it had a redeeming feature: it led me to realize that I had no idea what a differential equation is. The more I teach differential equations, the less I understand the mystery of differential equations. One of several unpleasant consequences of writing such a textbook is my being called upon to teach the sophomore differential equations course at MIT. This course is justly viewed as the most unpleasant undergraduate course in mathematics, by both teachers and students. Some of my colleagues have publicly announced that they would rather resign from MIT than lecture in sophomore differential equations. No such threat is available to me, since I am incorrectly labeled as the one member of the department who is supposed to have some expertise in the subject, guilty of writing an elementary textbook still in print. The Administrative Director of the MIT mathematics department, who exercises supreme authority upon the faculty's teaching, has only to wave a copy of my book at me, while staring at me in silence. At her prompting, I bow and fall into line; I will be the lecturer in the dreaded course for one more year, and I will repeat the mistakes I have been making every year since I first taught differential equations in 1958.

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