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George Boole

Selected Manuscripts on Logic and Its Philosophy

George Boole( )
Author: Boole, George
Bornet, G. Erard
Editor: Grattan-Guinness, Ivor
Bornet, Gerard
Series title:Science Networks. Historical Studies
ISBN:978-3-7643-5456-5
Publication Date:Apr 1997
Publisher:Springer Basel AG
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $54.99
Book Description:

George Boole (1815-1864) is well known to mathematicians for his research and textbooks on the calculus, but his name has spread world-wide for his innovations in symbolic logic and the development and applications made since his day. The utility of "Boolean algebra" in computing has greatly increased curiosity in the nature and extent of his achievements. His work is most accessible in his two books on logic, "A mathematical analysis of logic" (1947) and "An investigation of the laws...
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Book Details
Pages:236
Detailed Subjects: Mathematics / Logic
Mathematics / History & Philosophy
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.045 x 9.165 Inches
Book Weight:2.97 Pounds
Author Biography
Boole, George (Author)
Born in Lincolnshire, England, George Boole was a mathematician and logician at Queens College in Cork, Ireland, where he taught and developed his theory of logic. Well respected by his friends and associates, he had a reputation of being a kind of naive saint, who thought nothing of inviting a stranger to his home to continue a conversation that the two of them had begun on a train or in a shop.

Boole's development of symbolic logic had three major emphases. First, Boole believed that mathematicians of his day unnecessarily restricted themselves to the study of quantities and did not pay enough attention to abstract symbols. Second, he concerned himself with the relation between logic and language. Third, he studied the proper representation of mental operations. Thus, Boole moved from quantity to symbols to language and finally to the rules of the thinking mind itself. In 1847 Boole expressed his ideas in a pamphlet titled The Mathematical Analysis of Logic.

Boole is remembered for using familiar symbols of algebra and arithmetic to help represent ideas of logic. The system he used is now known as Boolean algebra. In creating his algebra of logic, Boole followed in the footsteps of the classical algebraists. Through careful analysis and resourcefulness, he developed a practical language for representing and solving a broad class of mathematical problems. Boole's contributions can be seen today in the design of the modern digital computer.

Boole died in 1864.

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