[math-fun] Fwd: [SIGMAA-HOM] Dover Republishes Moore on Zermelo
I'm forwarding this representative message from the SIGMAA History of Mathematics (HOM) email list in case people on math-fun haven't heard of it and are interested in joining it. I don't have anything to do with it beyond being a subscriber, but I enjoy its traffic. Thane ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Drucker, Thomas L. <druckert@uww.edu> Date: Fri, May 10, 2013 at 6:45 AM Subject: [SIGMAA-HOM] Dover Republishes Moore on Zermelo To: "sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org" <sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org> When I was a teenager, I bought all sorts of books on mathematics published by Dover, knowing that they weren’t hot off the press but appreciative of their making classics available. By now I’m seeing Dover publishing books that I did buy hot off the press, and I hope that a younger generation of teachers and students can take advantage of them. What brings this to mind is Dover’s having republished Gregory H. Moore’s ‘Zermelo’s Axiom of Choice’, originally published by Springer in 1982. It is one of the most impressive and important works in the history of logic with which I’m familiar, and it still sets a high standard for scholarship in the broader history of mathematics. Those historians who don’t have a copy of Moore’s book now have one fewer excuse. **** Thomas Drucker**** University of Wisconsin—Whitewater**** druckert@uww.edu**** ** ** You received this message as a subscriber to sigmaa-hom, the discussion list of the MAA Special Interest Group on the History of Mathematics. To unsubscribe, send an email consisting of the single line SIGNOFF sigmaa-hom to sympa@lists.maa.org. You can also choose to change your subscription mode to digest, among other options. To manage your subscription to the list, you can establish a login to the web interface at http://lists.maa.org/wws, or obtain a list of email commands available by sending an email consisting of the single line HELP to sympa@lists.maa.org. -- Thane Plambeck tplambeck@gmail.com http://counterwave.com/
Yikes! You know you're old when Dover starts publishing books that you originally bought new! Thanks for the info. I'll check out their website to see what else they have. I'm glad they're still around. Bob Baillie --- Thane Plambeck wrote:
I'm forwarding this representative message from the SIGMAA History of Mathematics (HOM) email list in case people on math-fun haven't heard of it and are interested in joining it.
I don't have anything to do with it beyond being a subscriber, but I enjoy its traffic.
Thane
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Drucker, Thomas L. <druckert@uww.edu> Date: Fri, May 10, 2013 at 6:45 AM Subject: [SIGMAA-HOM] Dover Republishes Moore on Zermelo To: "sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org" <sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org>
When I was a teenager, I bought all sorts of books on mathematics published by Dover, knowing that they weren’t hot off the press but appreciative of their making classics available. By now I’m seeing Dover publishing books that I did buy hot off the press, and I hope that a younger generation of teachers and students can take advantage of them. What brings this to mind is Dover’s having republished Gregory H. Moore’s ‘Zermelo’s Axiom of Choice’, originally published by Springer in 1982. It is one of the most impressive and important works in the history of logic with which I’m familiar, and it still sets a high standard for scholarship in the broader history of mathematics. Those historians who don’t have a copy of Moore’s book now have one fewer excuse. ****
Thomas Drucker****
University of Wisconsin—Whitewater****
druckert@uww.edu****
** **
You received this message as a subscriber to sigmaa-hom, the discussion list of the MAA Special Interest Group on the History of Mathematics. To unsubscribe, send an email consisting of the single line SIGNOFF sigmaa-hom to sympa@lists.maa.org.
You can also choose to change your subscription mode to digest, among other options. To manage your subscription to the list, you can establish a login to the web interface at http://lists.maa.org/wws, or obtain a list of email commands available by sending an email consisting of the single line HELP to sympa@lists.maa.org.
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There are books whose publication I eagerly awaited, which eventually got published, and then eventually went out of print. Then years later not only did Dover republish them but they eventually went out of print at Dover! How's that for getting old?! I miss all those Victorian era (or slightly later) math books that Dover once published, not always so rigorous but full of fascinating formulas and examples, and all those exercises culled from old tripos exams and the like. They would be out there forever, so I thought, so I could buy any of them later, any time I felt like it. --Fred Kochman -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: [math-fun] Fwd: [SIGMAA-HOM] Dover Republishes Moore on Zermelo Date: Fri, 10 May 2013 10:34:42 -0400 From: Robert Baillie <rjbaillie@frii.com> Reply-To: math-fun <math-fun@mailman.xmission.com> To: math-fun <math-fun@mailman.xmission.com> Yikes! You know you're old when Dover starts publishing books that you originally bought new! Thanks for the info. I'll check out their website to see what else they have. I'm glad they're still around. Bob Baillie --- Thane Plambeck wrote:
I'm forwarding this representative message from the SIGMAA History of Mathematics (HOM) email list in case people on math-fun haven't heard of it and are interested in joining it.
I don't have anything to do with it beyond being a subscriber, but I enjoy its traffic.
Thane
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Drucker, Thomas L. <druckert@uww.edu> Date: Fri, May 10, 2013 at 6:45 AM Subject: [SIGMAA-HOM] Dover Republishes Moore on Zermelo To: "sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org" <sigmaa-hom@lists.maa.org>
When I was a teenager, I bought all sorts of books on mathematics published by Dover, knowing that they weren’t hot off the press but appreciative of their making classics available. By now I’m seeing Dover publishing books that I did buy hot off the press, and I hope that a younger generation of teachers and students can take advantage of them. What brings this to mind is Dover’s having republished Gregory H. Moore’s ‘Zermelo’s Axiom of Choice’, originally published by Springer in 1982. It is one of the most impressive and important works in the history of logic with which I’m familiar, and it still sets a high standard for scholarship in the broader history of mathematics. Those historians who don’t havea copy of Moore’s book now have one fewer excuse. ****
Thomas Drucker****
University of Wisconsin—Whitewater****
druckert@uww.edu****
** **
You received this message as a subscriber to sigmaa-hom, the discussion list of the MAA Special Interest Group on the History of Mathematics. To unsubscribe, send an email consisting of the single line SIGNOFF sigmaa-hom to sympa@lists.maa.org.
You can also choose to change your subscription mode to digest, among other options. To manage your subscription to the list, you can establish a login to the web interface at http://lists.maa.org/wws, or obtain a list of email commands available by sending an email consisting of the single line HELP to sympa@lists.maa.org.
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I've had great luck finding 'Victorian Era' books on http://books.google.com/ E.g., Maxwell's collected works, Treatises on Determinants, etc. You might want to download as many of these as possible, as you never know when Congress will 're-copyright' all this stuff yet again (so much for the Constitution's 'limited time' clause). Luckily, a terabyte of memory is now < $100. At 08:32 AM 5/10/2013, Fred Kochman wrote:
I miss all those Victorian era (or slightly later) math books that Dover once published, not always so rigorous but full of fascinating formulas and examples, and all those exercises culled from old tripos exams and the like. They would be out there forever, so I thought, so I could buy any of them later, any time I felt like it.
participants (4)
-
Fred Kochman -
Henry Baker -
Robert Baillie -
Thane Plambeck