Template:Selected anniversaries/May 9: Difference between revisions

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||1876: Gilbert Ames Bliss born ... mathematician, known for his work on the calculus of variations. Pic.
||1876: Gilbert Ames Bliss born ... mathematician, known for his work on the calculus of variations. Pic.


||1882: Henry John Kaiser born ... industrialist who became known as the father of modern American shipbuilding.
||1882: Henry John Kaiser born ... industrialist who became known as the father of modern American shipbuilding. Pic.


||1887: Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show opens in London.
||1887: Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show opens in London. Pic.


||1898: Arend Heyting born ... mathematician and logician. He will give the first formal development of intuitionistic logic in order to codify Brouwer's way of doing mathematics. Pic.
||1898: Arend Heyting born ... mathematician and logician. He will give the first formal development of intuitionistic logic in order to codify Brouwer's way of doing mathematics. Pic.
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File:Georg Cantor 1894.png|link=Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|1917: Mathematician and philosopher [[Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|Georg Cantor]] publishes new [[Set theory (nonfiction)|theory of sets]] derived from [[Gnomon algorithm functions]]. Colleagues hail it as "a magisterial contribution to science and art of detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]]."
File:Georg Cantor 1894.png|link=Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|1917: Mathematician and philosopher [[Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|Georg Cantor]] publishes new [[Set theory (nonfiction)|theory of sets]] derived from [[Gnomon algorithm functions]]. Colleagues hail it as "a magisterial contribution to science and art of detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]]."


||1931: Albert Abraham Michelson dies ... physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate.
||1931: Albert Abraham Michelson dies ... physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


|File:John_Brunner's_Lee_and_Turner_engine.jpg|link=John Brunner|1940: [[John Brunner]] uses a [[Scrying engine|Lee and Turner scrying engine]] to compute the "near certain probability" that the Royal Navy will succeed in capturing the [[German submarine U-110 (1940) (nonfiction)|German submarine U-110]].
|File:John_Brunner's_Lee_and_Turner_engine.jpg|link=John Brunner|1940: [[John Brunner]] uses a [[Scrying engine|Lee and Turner scrying engine]] to compute the "near certain probability" that the Royal Navy will succeed in capturing the [[German submarine U-110 (1940) (nonfiction)|German submarine U-110]].

Revision as of 06:09, 22 March 2019