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Descriptive Geometry, The Spread of a Polytechnic Art : The Legacy of Gaspard Monge

Descriptive Geometry, The Spread of a Polytechnic Art : The Legacy of Gaspard Monge

Author: Evelyne Barbin Marta Menghini Klaus Volkert
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Publication Date: 15 Aug 2020
ISBN-13: 9783030148102
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Description


This book seeks to explore the history of descriptive geometry in relation to its circulation in the 19th century, which had been favoured by the transfers of the model of the Ecole Polytechnique to other countries. The book also covers the diffusion of its teaching from higher instruction to technical and secondary teaching. In relation to that, there is analysis of the role of the institution - similar but definitely not identical in the different countries - in the field under consideration. The book contains chapters focused on different countries, areas, and institutions, written by specialists of the history of the field. Insights on descriptive geometry are provided in the context of the mathematical aspect, the aspect of teaching in particular to non-mathematicians, and the institutions themselves.


Table of Contents


Table of Contents

Part I- First spreading in Western Europe

Chapter 1 Monge's Descriptive Geometry: his Lessons and the Teachings given by

Lacroix and Hachette

Evelyne Barbin

Chapter 2 Descriptive Geometry in France: Circulation, Transformation, Recognition

(1795- 1905)

Evelyne Barbin

Chapter 3 Descriptive Geometry in Italy in the 19th Century: Spread, Popularization, Teaching

Roberto Scoth

Chapter 4 Luigi Cremona and Wilhelm Fiedler: the Link between Descriptive and Projective Geometry in Technical Instruction

Marta Menghini

Chapter 5 Descriptive Geometry in 19th Century Spain: from Monge to Cirodde

Elena Ausejo

Chapter 6 Descriptive Geometry in Spain and the Emergence of the late Modern European outlook on the Relationship between Pure Science and Technology

Ana Millan Gasca

Chapter 7 Portuguese books of Descriptive Geometry, from University and Polytechnic to Secondary School

Eliana Manuel Pinho, Jose Carlos Santos, Joao Pedro Xavier


Part II- Installation of Descriptive Geometry in Europe

Chapter 8 A German Interpreting of Descriptive Geometry and Polytechnic

Nadine Benstein

Chapter 9 The Evolution of Descriptive Geometry in Austria

Hellmuth Stachel

Chapter 10 The Vienna School of Descriptive Geometry

Christa Binder

Chapter 11 Otto Wilhelm Fiedler and the Synthesis of Projective and Descriptive Geometry

Klaus Volkert

Chapter 12 At the Crossroads of two Engineering Cultures, or An Unedited Story of the French Polytechnician Charles Potier's Descriptive Geometry Books in Russia

Irina Gouzevitch and Dmitri Gouzevitch

Chapter 13 Engineering Studies and Secondary Education: Descriptive Geometry in the Netherlands (1820-1960)

Jenneke Kruger

Chapter 14 In Pursuit of Monge's Ideal: the Introduction of Descriptive Geometry in the Educational Institutions in Greece during the 19th century

Christine Phili

Chapter 15 The Rise and Fall of Descriptive Geometry in Denmark

Jesper Lutzen

Chapter 16 Descriptive Geometry at Czech Technical Universities until 1939

Vlasta Moravcova

Chapter 17 The Love Affair with Descriptive Geometry: Its History in Serbia

Katarina Jevtic Novakovic and Snezana Lawrence

Chapter 18 Descriptive geometry in England - Lost in Translation

Snezana Lawrence

Part III- Descriptive geometry in America and Africa

Chapter 19 Teaching of Descriptive Geometry in the United States (1817-1915): Circulation among Military Engineers, Scholars and Draftsmen

Thomas Preveraud

Chapter 20 The Teaching of Descriptive Geometry in Egypt (1837-1902)

Pascal Crozet

Chapter 21 The Dissemination of Descriptive Geometry in Latin America Gert Schubring, Vinicius Mendes,

Thiago Oliveira and Luiz Carlos Guimaraes


Epilogue

Chapter 22 The Myth of the Polytechnic School Gert Schubring


Author Description


Evelyne Barbin was previously a professor of epistemology and history of sciences at the University of Nantes (France). Since 2014, she is now professor emeritus at the University of Nantes. She is a member of the Laboratory of Mathematics Jean Leray CNRS UMR 6629, where she is in charge of the research group on history of mathematics. She taught history of mathematics and sciences in all levels of teaching from licence to master. She was the director of 15 theses on the history of mathematics and sciences. Her research concerns three fields: history of mathematics, history of mathematics teachings, and relations between history and teaching of mathematics. The main themes of her historical research are: mathematical proofs in history, mathematics and sciences in the 17th and 19th centuries, and history of mathematics teaching from the 19th to the 20th century. She has worked at the IREM (Institute for Research on Mathematics Education) since 1975. As convenor of the National Committee of the IREM "Epistemology and History of Mathematics", she has organized 20 national colloquia, 8 interdisciplinary Summer Universities on history and teaching mathematics, and the first European Summer University (ESU) "Epistemology and History in Mathematics Education" in 1993. She was chair of seven ESUs from 1996 to 2014. Since 1980, she has also been a member of the International Study Group on the Relations between History and Pedagogy of Mathematics (HPM). She was the chair of HPM from 2008 to 2012.
Marta Menghini is an associate professor in the Department of Mathematics of the University of Rome Sapienza. She is the author of numerous published works in the fields of Mathematics Education, History of Mathematics, and the History of Mathematics Education. She was in the Scientific Committee and chaired the Organizing Committee of the International Symposium held in Rome in March 2008, "The First Century of the International Commission on Mathematical Instruction: Reflecting and Shaping the World of Mathematics Education", and edited the volume published on this occasion by Enciclopedia Italiana. In 2012, she held a Regular Lecture at ICME 12 in Seoul. She wrote, with Evelyne Barbin, the Chapter on "History of Teaching Geometry" in the International Handbook on the History of Mathematics Education. She was involved in the translation of Felix Klein's third volume on "Elementary Mathematics from a Higher Standpoint", which appeared in 2016.
Klaus Volkert is a full professor at the University of Wuppertal; he lectures on mathematics, didactics, and history. His interests are mainly in the history of geometry and topology, and recently he started a project on Wilhelm Fiedler. He is Editor in Chief of the journal "Mathematische Semesterberichte" (together with J. Steuding) and editor of the series "Mathematik im Kontext" (with David Rowe).






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