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  1. Analyse et géométrie, histoire des courbes gauches De Clairaut à Darboux.Jean Delcourt - 2011 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 65 (3):229-293.
    RésuméCet article est consacré à l’histoire de la théorie locale des courbes “à double courbure”. Initiée par Clairaut en 1731, cette théorie se développe en parallèle à la théorie des surfaces et trouve son achèvement avec les formules de Serret et Frenet et leur interprétation par Darboux, en 1887. Au delà de l’analyse des contributions de nombreux mathématiciens, parmi lesquels Monge bien sûr mais aussi Fourier, Lagrange et Cauchy, notre étude donne un regard particulier sur l’évolution conjointe de l’Analyse et (...)
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  • From Problems to Structures: the Cousin Problems and the Emergence of the Sheaf Concept.Renaud Chorlay - 2009 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 64 (1):1-73.
    Historical work on the emergence of sheaf theory has mainly concentrated on the topological origins of sheaf cohomology in the period from 1945 to 1950 and on subsequent developments. However, a shift of emphasis both in time-scale and disciplinary context can help gain new insight into the emergence of the sheaf concept. This paper concentrates on Henri Cartan’s work in the theory of analytic functions of several complex variables and the strikingly different roles it played at two stages of the (...)
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  • “Local–Global”: the first twenty years.Renaud Chorlay - 2011 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 65 (1):1-66.
    This paper investigates how and when pairs of terms such as “local–global” and “im Kleinen–im Grossen” began to be used by mathematicians as explicit reflexive categories. A first phase of automatic search led to the delineation of the relevant corpus, and to the identification of the period from 1898 to 1918 as that of emergence. The emergence appears to have been, from the very start, both transdisciplinary (function theory, calculus of variations, differential geometry) and international, although the AMS-Göttingen connection played (...)
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