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Oeuvres de Desargues

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Mathematics series
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The French mathematician and engineer Gerard Desargues (1591-1661) was one of the founders of projective geometry.

Desargues' theorem is named in the honour of this prolific writer of treatises on geometry and its application to the arts and architecture.

His important writings, which had been lost, were published in 1864 by the mathematician and scientific historian Noel-Germinal Poudra (1794-1894).

Poudra's two-volume edition of his treatises, republished here, reveals the major role played by Desargues in the scientific debates of the seventeenth century.

It includes a biography of Desargues, in which Poudra discusses his role as architect, as well as his influence on famous scientists of his time including Pascal and Descartes.

Poudra also reproduces some of the - often critical - responses to Desargues' work by his contemporaries.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108032591 / 9781108032599
Mixed media product
516.5
10/11/2011
United Kingdom
French
various pagings : ill.
22 cm
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