The Scientific Revolutions of the 16th and 17th Centuries
12 September 2005 - 14 December 2005
Invited Speakers
[table view]
François De Gandt
Université Charles De Gaulle Lille III
20 October 2005
- 24 October 2005
Talk:
Indivisibles et au-delà : plusieurs epoques de la dynamique de Newton.
Jean Dhombres
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
12 September 2005
- 18 September 2005
20 October 2005
- 23 October 2005
Course:
Pre-indivisibles, indivisibles, and post-indivisibles in the manuscripts of Gregory of Saint-Vincent from 1625 to his Opus Geometricum of 1647
Course:
What is analytic in the theory of proportion
Egidio Festa
Centre Alexandre Koyré, Paris
22 November 2005
- 2 December 2005
Seminar:
The Galileo's and Torricelli's theories of impact
Paolo Freguglia
Università dell'Aquila, Dipartimento di Matematica Pura e Applicata
15 September 2005
- 17 September 2005
21 October 2005
- 22 October 2005
6 December 2005
- 7 December 2005
Seminar:
The diophantine equations in Viète and its scholars
Massimo Galuzzi
Dipartimento di Matematica, Università statale, Milano
20 October 2005
- 22 October 2005
24 November 2005
- 26 November 2005
Talk:
Indivisibles: from the Archimedean Tradition to the birth of Differential calculus
Antonio Carlo Garibaldi
Università di Genova - Dipartimento di Matematica
15 September 2005
- 17 September 2005
5 December 2005
- 8 December 2005
Seminar:
Le sezioni angolari di Viète, parte della sua Algebra nova
Stefano Gattei
Dipartimento di Filosofia, Università degli Studi di Pisa
4 December 2005
- 9 December 2005
12 December 2005
- 14 December 2005
Seminar:
Ubi materia, ibi geometria
Anita Guerrini
University of California, Santa Barbara
4 November 2005
- 6 November 2005
Seminar:
The Animal as Artifact: the Histoire des animaux Project
Niccolò Guicciardini
Universita' di Siena
25 November 2005
- 26 November 2005
Seminar:
The relationships between geometry and mechanics at the mid of the seventeenth century: an overview
Mario O. Helbing
ETH, Zürich
24 November 2005
- 26 November 2005
Course:
Le mouvement est-il un état? Une critique à Alexandre Koyré
[<<Prev -
Next>>]