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Carlo Beenakker
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See pages 107 and following and pages 244 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

See pages 107 and following and pages 244 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views
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Source Link
Carlo Beenakker
  • 188.1k
  • 18
  • 448
  • 651

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

For an analysis of the proof itself, see Notes on Richard Dedekind’s "Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen?" by David Joyce (2005).

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

For an analysis of the proof itself, see Notes on Richard Dedekind’s "Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen?" by David Joyce (2005).

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views
added 176 characters in body
Source Link
Carlo Beenakker
  • 188.1k
  • 18
  • 448
  • 651

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (second edition2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

For an analysis of the proof itself, see Notes on Richard Dedekind’s "Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen?" by David Joyce (2005).

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics (second edition)

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

See pages 107 and following of Labyrinth of Thought: A History of Set Theory and Its Role in Modern Mathematics by José Ferreirós (2008).

  • Dedekind and the set-theoretical approach
    1. The algebraic origins of Dedekind's set theory, 1856-58
    2. A new fundamental notion for algebra: fields
    3. The emergence of algebraic number theory
    4. Ideals and methodology
    5. Dedekind's infinitism
    6. The diffusion of Dedekind's views

For an analysis of the proof itself, see Notes on Richard Dedekind’s "Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen?" by David Joyce (2005).

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Carlo Beenakker
  • 188.1k
  • 18
  • 448
  • 651
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Carlo Beenakker
  • 188.1k
  • 18
  • 448
  • 651
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