ORESME Reading Group

Picture of Oresme at work ...Our patron, Nicole Oresme, reviewing the last session's proceedings.
 
Daniel J. Curtin (Northern Kentucky University) and Daniel E. Otero (Xavier University) have organized the Ohio River Early Sources in Mathematical Exposition (ORESME) Reading Group. The Reading Group has been bringing together scholars interested in the history of mathematics from the Cincinnati tri-state area twice a year since 1998 to read original source materials in mathematics.  The organization was (cleverly) named after the French Scholastic philosopher Nicole Oresme (1323-1382) whose "latitude of forms" constituted early graphical representations of mathematical functions, long before Descartes. The Reading Group was inspired by the experience the organizers shared during the summers of 1995-1997 at the Institute on the History of Mathematics and its Use in Teaching held at American University (Washington, DC), and was established under the guidance of Fred Rickey, one of the organizers of the Institute and an erstwhile Ohioan.

 

Announcement of upcoming Meetings

Our 10th Anniversary meeting!

25-26 January, 2008, at Xavier University: in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the publication of the famous papers of Ernst Zermelo (1871-1953) setting out the axioms of set theory and a proof of the axiom of choice, our readings are

 

Archive of Proceedings of the Meetings

The nineteenth meeting was held October 5-6, 2007, at Northern Kentucky University.  This was the second meeting in celebration of the Euler tricentennial.  We read from Euler's Introductio in analysin infinitorum (Introduction to the analysis of the infinite), translated by John D. Blanton (Springer-Verlag, 1988).  The selections from Book One: Chapter I. On Functions in General; Chapter VI. On Exponentials and Logarithms; Chapter VII. Exponentials and Logarithms Expressed through Series; Chapter VIII. On Transcendental Quantities Which Arise from the Circle; Chapter XVII. On using recurrent series to find roots of equations; and Chapter XVIII On continued fractions; and from Book Two: Chapters I and II.

The eighteenth meeting was held January 26-27, 2007, at Xavier University.  This was the first of two meetings planned to celebrate the Euler tricentennial.  We read selections (from v.1, Sections I.xxi - I.xxiii on logarithms; II.v on series; IV.viii on square roots of binomials; IV.x - IV.xv on cubics and quartics; from v.2, Sections IV - VII on solutions to Pell's equation) from Leonhard Euler's Vollständige Anleitung zur Algebra (St. Petersburg Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1770), available in a 1984 Springer reprint of John Hewlett's 1828 English translation as Elements of Algebra.

The seventeenth meeting was held September 15-16, 2006, at Northern Kentucky University.  The topic of the meeting was the work and career of Alan Turing.  We read two of his most important papers, Computing machinery and intelligence, in Mind (new series), vol. 59, no. 236 (Oct 1950), pp. 433-460, in which Turing presents what is known today as the Turing test for artificial intelligence; and On computable numbers, with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem, Proc. London Math. Soc. (2) 42 (1936), 230-265, in which Turing explores a definition of computability.

The sixteenth meeting was held January 20-21, 2006, at the University of Cincinnati, hosted by Charles Groetsch, one of the founding members of the Reading Group.  The topic of the meeting was the famous and important work of Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) on kinematics, as it appeared in Days Three and Four of his Discorsi e dimonstrzioni mathematiche intorno a due nuove scienze (Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Concerning Two New Sciences), published posthumously in 1654 and available in English translation by Stillman Drake (U. Wisc. Pr., 1974).

The fifteenth meeting was held October 21-22, 2005, at Northern Kentucky University.  The focus of the meeting was the mathematical career of Hermann Weyl (1885-1955).  We read his book on Symmetry (Princeton University Press, 1952, reprinted in 1982 and 1989).

The fourteenth meeting was held January 28-29, 2005, at Xavier University. The readings included the paper in which John von Neumann first proved the Minimax Theorem and launched the serious mathematical theory of games: Zur Theorie der Gesellschaftspiele (Math. Annalen 100 (1928), 295-320), translated as On the theory of games of strategy by Sonya Bargmann, in Contributions to the Theory of Games, IV (Annals of Mathematics Studies 40), A. W. Tucker and R. D. Luce, eds., Princeton U. Pr., 1950, pp. 13-42; additionally, the paper that started von Neumann thinking about games of strategy: Emile Borel, La théorie du jeux et les équations intégrales à noyau symétriques (C. R. Math. Acad. Sci. Paris, vol. 173 (1921), 1304-1308) , translated as Theory of games and integral equations with skew symmetric kernels by Leonard J. Savage, Econometrica, vol. 21, no. 1 (Jan 1953), 97-100.   For details see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The thirteenth meeting was held September 17-18, 2004, at Northern Kentucky University. The readings were two papers by Maj. Percy MacMahon: The design of repeating patterns, Part I ( Proc. Royal Soc. London, Ser. A, vol. 101, no. 708 (Apr 1, 1922), 81-94) , and On the thirty cubes that can be constructed with six differently coloured squares (Proc. London Math. Soc. 24 (1893), 145-155).  For details see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.
The twelfth meeting was held January 30-31, 2004, at Xavier University. The readings were: the Preface, and Chapters 1, 6, and 11 from George Polya's Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning (1954); the Preface and Appendix to vol 1, and Chapters 13-14 of vol. 2 from Mathematical Discovery (1961). This was the second meeting on the work of Polya, and we focused deliberately on his work in teaching mathematics. For details see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The eleventh meeting was held September 26-27, 2003, at Northern Kentucky University. The reading was the Introduction and first Chapter of George Polya's Combinatorial Enumeration of Groups, Graphs and Chemical Compounds (Springer, 1987), the English version with R. C. Read of a translation of his influential 1937 paper Kombinatorische Anzahlbestimmungen fur Grüppen, Graphen und chemische Verbindungen (Acta Math., 68, 145-254) in which the eponymous Enumeration Theorem first appears. This is the first of two meetings devoted to Polya. For deatils see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The tenth meeting was held January 24-25, 2003, at Xavier University. The readings were by E. H. Moore: first, his A doubly infinite system of simple groups (in Mathematical Papers Read at the [1893] International Mathematical Congress, Macmillan,1896), in which he contributed to early work on the classification of finite groups; and also On the foundations of mathematics (Science, vol. XVII, no. 428 (March 13, 1903)), Moore's Presidential address upon retirement from that AMS post. For details see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The ninth meeting was held September 20-21, 2002, at the University of Louisville. Michael J. Crowe, Distinguished Scholar in Residence and our special guest, led the discussion of work of Hermann Grassmann and, more generally, on the history of vector analysis. Danny Otero's report of the meeting. It includes links to Crowe's notes "A History of Vector Analysis."

The eighth meeting was held May 10-11, 2002at Xavier University. The reading was L. E. Dickson's (1874-1954), Recent progress on Warings's Theorem and its generalizations (Bull. Amer. Math.Soc., 39, 701-727). For more, see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The seventh meeting was held September 14-15, 2001,at NKU.  We read three papers and a letter of Georg Cantor dating from the 1880s and 1890s on his transfinite numbers.  For more, see Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The sixth meeting was held January 26-27, 2001,at XU.  We read a paper by the British mathematician William Burnside that was influential in the development of group theory at the beginning of the 20th century.  The paper, On an unsettled question in thetheory of discontinuous groups (Quart. J. of Pure and Applied Math. 33 (1902) 230-238), introduced what is now known as the Burnside problem: are all finitely generated torsion groups finite?  For more, see Danny Otero's reportof the meeting.

There was no meeting in Fall 2000.  The members decided to support instead the Midwest History of Mathematics Conference at NKU, October 13-14, 2000.

Our fifth meeting was held March 24-25, 2000, at Miami University, hosted by members David Kullman and Chuck Holmes. John Fauvel of the Open University (UK) was our special guest, and led us in a reading of Isaac Newton's "De Analysi" (1669) [in The Mathematical Papers of Isaac Newton, D.T. Whiteside, ed., Cambridge, 1967-, vol. 1, pp. 206-247]. In lieu of a formal report, we have photos of the meeting taken by our illustrious guest, John Fauvel.

Our fourth meeting was held at NKU on September 17-18,1999.  We completed our study of Klein and his Erlangerprogramm. See Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

Our third meeting was again at Xavier, January 29-30,1999.  This was the first of two meetings on Felix Klein's Erlangerprogramm.  The primary reading was Haskell's translation A Comparative Review of Recent Researches in Geometry, (Bull. NY Math.Soc. 2 (1892-3), 215-249). Dick Davitt prepared a preliminary bibliography of Klein and the Erlangerprogramm for the members. See Danny Otero's report of the meeting.

The second meeting took place on September 18-19, 1998, at Northern Kentucky University.  The paper Sur une courbe continue sans tangente obtenue par une construction géométrique élémentaire, (Archiv fur Matematik, Astronomi och Fysik, 1 (1904) 681-702, [trans.by Ilan Vardi in Classics on Fractals, Gerald Edgar, ed. (Addison-Wesley, 1993)]), in which Helge von Koch presented the Koch Snowflake, was the topic of the meeting. This material is reprinted, with some additions, in Une méthode géométrique élémentaire pour l'étude de certaines questiones de la théorie des courbes planes (ActaMathematica, 30 (1906), 145-174).  The last four pages are available here in JPEG format.  Dick Pulskamp's translation is available in dvi format.  Here is a translation of some additional material, not in the 1904 paper, proving the curve is simple.

The inaugural meeting of ORESME was held January 30-31, 1998, at Xavier University. We read William Fogg Osgood's paper, A Jordan Curve of Positive Area (Trans. AMS, 4 (1903) 107-112).  See Danny Otero's report of the meeting.


 

Please email comments or suggestions to curtin@nku.eduor otero@xu.edu.

To Dan Curtin's HomePage