
Published online:
24 May 2018
Published in print:
04 December 2017
Online ISBN:
9780226514659
Print ISBN:
9780226514482
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The Philosophical Breakfast Club The Philosophical Breakfast Club
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Ripe for Reform Ripe for Reform
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Herschel and Babbage—The Revolutionary Duo Herschel and Babbage—The Revolutionary Duo
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The Analytical Society The Analytical Society
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Hints of Disagreement Hints of Disagreement
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Opting for Lagrange Opting for Lagrange
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Babbage’s “Philosophy of Analysis” Babbage’s “Philosophy of Analysis”
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Hamilton’s Meta-Mathematical Taxonomy Hamilton’s Meta-Mathematical Taxonomy
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“A Language of Signs” “A Language of Signs”
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For, and Yet against, Lagrange For, and Yet against, Lagrange
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Chapter
Five Peacock, Babbage, and the “Heresy of the Dots”
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Pages
135–166
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Published:December 2017
Cite
OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE
Fisch, Menachem, 'Peacock, Babbage, and the “Heresy of the Dots”', Creatively Undecided: Toward a History and Philosophy of Scientific Agency (Chicago, IL , 2017; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 24 May 2018), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226514659.003.0007, accessed 14 May 2025.
CHICAGO STYLE
Fisch, Menachem. "Peacock, Babbage, and the “Heresy of the Dots”." In Creatively Undecided: Toward a History and Philosophy of Scientific Agency University of Chicago Press, 2017. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2018. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226514659.003.0007.
Abstract
The chapter describes the background to the young Peacock's mathematical career – his involvement as an undergraduate at Trinity College, Cambridge, alongside fellow students John Herschel, Charles Babbage and a little later, William Whewell, in the Analytical Society, and the role it played in revolutionizing the university's mathematics curriculum – and the keen ambivalating challenge to his native "Lockean" view of algebra as generalized arithmetic that he encountered especially in Babbage's work on "pure analysis" which is described in some detail.
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