MTU Cork Library Catalogue

Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

Pierre-Simon Laplace, 1749-1827 : a life in exact science / Charles Coulston Gillispie ; with the collaboration of Robert Fox and Ivor Grattan-Guinness.

By: Gillispie, Charles Coulston.
Contributor(s): Fox, Robert, 1938- | Grattan-Guinness, I.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press, 1997Description: xii, 322 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.ISBN: 0691011850 .Subject(s): Laplace, Pierre Simon, marquis de, 1749-1827 | Physics -- History | Astronomy -- History | Physicists -- France -- Biography | Scientists -- France -- BiographyDDC classification: 509.2
Contents:
Part I: Early career, 1768-1778 -- Part II: Laplace in his prime, 1778-1789 -- Part III: Synthesis and scientific statesmanship -- Part IV: Laplacian physics and probability -- Part V: The Laplace transform.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 509.2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00069084
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Pierre-Simon Laplace was among the most influential scientists in history. Often referred to as the lawgiver of French science, he is known for his technical contributions to exact science, for the philosophical point of view he developed in the presentation of his work, and for the leading part he took in forming the modern discipline of mathematical physics. His two most famous treatises were the five-volume Traité de mécanique céleste (1799-1825) and Théorie analytique des probabilités (1812). In the former he demonstrated mathematically the stability of the solar system in service to the universal Newtonian law of gravity. In the latter he developed probability from a set of miscellaneous problems concerning games, averages, mortality, and insurance risks into the branch of mathematics that permitted the quantification of estimates of error and the drawing of statistical inferences, wherever data warranted, in social, medical, and juridical matters, as well as in the physical sciences.


This book traces the development of Laplace's research program and of his participation in the Academy of Science during the last decades of the Old Regime into the early years of the French Revolution. A scientific biography by Charles Gillispie comprises the major portion of the book. Robert Fox contributes an account of Laplace's attempt to form a school of young physicists who would extend the Newtonian model from astronomy to physics, and Ivor Grattan-Guinness summarizes the history of the scientist's most important single mathematical contribution, the Laplace Transform.

Bibliography: (pages 281-317) and index.

Part I: Early career, 1768-1778 -- Part II: Laplace in his prime, 1778-1789 -- Part III: Synthesis and scientific statesmanship -- Part IV: Laplacian physics and probability -- Part V: The Laplace transform.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

CHOICE Review

Gillispie is one of the leading historians of science; together with two highly qualified collaborators, he has written an exhaustive biography of Laplace, one of the towering French scientists of all time. Not only a biography of Laplace the man and his relationship to his time and his contemporaries, this is even more so a detailed description and mathematical discussion of his multifaceted work in celestial mechanics and analysis. A list of Laplace's published work, an extensive bibliography, and a relatively detailed index close the book, which clearly addresses itself to specialists, be they historians of science or mathematicians. Graduates; faculty; professionals. H. K. Eichhorn University of Florida

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Charles Coulston Gillispie is Dayton-Stockton Professor of History Emeritus at Princeton University, where he founded the Program in History of Science in 1960. He is the author or numerous books, including The Edge of Objectivity (Princeton). He is the editor of the sixteen-volume Dictionary of Scientific Biography . Robert Fox is Professor of History of Science at the University of Oxford. Ivor Grattan-Guinness is Professor of the History of Mathmatics and Logic at Middlesex Polytechnic University in London.

Powered by Koha