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Jeremy John Gray
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BIOGRAPHY

Emeritus Professor, School of Mathematics and Statistics, Open University. Author of Plato's Ghost; Henri Poincaré: A Scientific Biography; Ideas of Space; and others.

Primary Contributions (12)
Carl Friedrich Gauss
Carl Friedrich Gauss was a German mathematician, generally regarded as one of the greatest mathematicians of all time for his contributions to number theory, geometry, probability theory, geodesy, planetary astronomy, the theory of functions, and potential theory (including electromagnetism). Gauss…
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Publications (3)
Henri Poincare: A Scientific Biography
Henri Poincare: A Scientific Biography (November 2012)
By Jeremy Gray
Henri Poincaré (1854-1912) was not just one of the most inventive, versatile, and productive mathematicians of all time--he was also a leading physicist who almost won a Nobel Prize for physics and a prominent philosopher of science whose fresh and surprising essays are still in print a century later. The first in-depth and comprehensive look at his many accomplishments, Henri Poincaré explores all the fields that Poincaré touched, the debates sparked by his original investigations, and...
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Plato's Ghost: The Modernist Transformation of Mathematics
Plato's Ghost: The Modernist Transformation of Mathematics (September 2008)
By Jeremy Gray
Plato's Ghost is the first book to examine the development of mathematics from 1880 to 1920 as a modernist transformation similar to those in art, literature, and music. Jeremy Gray traces the growth of mathematical modernism from its roots in problem solving and theory to its interactions with physics, philosophy, theology, psychology, and ideas about real and artificial languages. He shows how mathematics was popularized, and explains how mathematical modernism not only gave expression...
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Ideas of Space: Euclidean, non-Euclidean, and Relativistic
Ideas of Space: Euclidean, non-Euclidean, and Relativistic (September 1989)
By Jeremy Gray
Now in a revised and expanded new edition, this volume chronologically traces the evolution of Euclidean, non-Euclidean, and relativistic theories regarding the shape of the universe. A unique, highly readable, and entertaining account, the book assumes no special mathematical knowledge. It reviews the failed classical attempts to prove the parallel postulate and provides coverage of the role of Gauss, Lobachevskii, and Bolyai in setting the foundations of modern differential geometry, which laid...
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