2016
DOI: 10.1086/690353
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Infinitesimal: How a Dangerous Mathematical Theory Shaped the Modern World. Amir Alexander. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014. 354 pp. $27.

Abstract: In the autumn of 1656, the Savilian professor of geometry at the University of Oxford, John Wallis, published an attack on the mathematics of Thomas Hobbes entitled Due correction for Mr Hobbes or schoole discipline for not saying his lessons right. Wallis took aim at several targets presented by Hobbes in his Leviathan, which had appeared five years earlier. These included the use made by Hobbes of the principles of Euclidean geometry, the criticism that Hobbes advanced of the English universities (which he s… Show more

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“…This paradox proposed by Evangelista Torricelli (see, e.g., [1,44]) considers a rectangle ABCD that is not a square (see Fig. 1).…”
Section: The Rectangle Paradox Of Torricellimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This paradox proposed by Evangelista Torricelli (see, e.g., [1,44]) considers a rectangle ABCD that is not a square (see Fig. 1).…”
Section: The Rectangle Paradox Of Torricellimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The last paradox we consider here is the Thomson Lamp Paradox described in [63]. Suppose that we have a lamp and start to turn it on for 1 2 minute, then turn it off for 1 4 minute, then on again for 1 8 minute, etc. At the end of one minute, the lamp switch will have been moved infinitely many times (to be precise, countably many times).…”
Section: Thomson's Lamp Paradoxmentioning
confidence: 99%
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