
Symbols and Things
Mathematics in the Age of Steam
Kevin Lambert(Author)
University of Pittsburgh Press
Will be published approx. on 28. December 2021
Book
Hardback
330 pages
978-0-8229-4683-0 (ISBN)
Description
In the steam-powered mechanical age of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the work of late Georgian and early Victorian mathematicians came to depend on far more than the properties of number. British mathematicians came to rely on industrialized paper and pen manufacture, railways and mail, and the print industries of the book, disciplinary journal, magazine, and newspaper. Although not always physically present with one another, the characters central to this book-from George Green to William Rowan Hamilton-relied heavily on communication technologies as they developed their theories in consort with colleagues. The letters they exchanged, together with the equations, diagrams, tables, or pictures that filled their manuscripts and publications, were all tangible traces of abstract ideas that extended mathematicians into their social and material environment. Each chapter of this book explores a thing, or assembling of things, needed by mathematicians to do their work-whether a textbook, museum, journal, library, diagram, notebook, or letter-all characteristic of the mid-nineteenth-century British taskscape, but also representative of great change to a discipline brought about by an industrialized world in motion.
Reviews / Votes
Symbols and Things account is informative, lucid, and could serve as a model for what could be done elsewhere. * Centaurus * This book should stimulate lively discussions among specialists about the potential new insights and unavoidable limitations of the methodology. * CHOICE * This is a book about British mathematicians: how they worked and changed their material environment-their taskscape-and how that environment changed them. Mathematicians, like all other people, think through and with their taskscape. It is the mathematician's task to bring mathematics to ever-greater heights. As a historian, Lambert brings it back to earth in a most fascinating, well documented, and scholarly narrative that involves museums, notebooks, scientific societies, post offices, libraries and a battery of many more elements in society. * Metascience * Kevin Lambert's Symbols and Things is a remarkable piece of work that has the promise to significantly expand our understandings of the ways mathematical ideas develop in their historical contexts. Lambert's focus is on developments in Victorian mathematics and physics, but the implications of his mode of analysis stretch far beyond the constraints of that depiction. His understanding of mathematicians as engaged in 'mindful work' allows him to recognize their essential ties to the work of builders, painters, poets, theologians, and natural philosophers. In Lambert's construction, the textbooks, journals, libraries, museums, diagrams, notebooks, and personal letters in which mathematics was embedded become the tips of icebergs of material, social, and political development. The result is a breathtakingly original study that at once recasts understandings of the nature of mathematics and sheds new light on the Victorian culture in which it developed. -- Joan Richards, Brown UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Pittsburgh PA
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 232 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
658 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8229-4683-0 (9780822946830)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
10/2021
David & Charles
€58.99
Available for download
Person
Kevin Lambert is a historian of science and mathematics and professor in the liberal studies department at California State University, Fullerton.