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  1. Integral equations between theory and practice: the cases of Italy and France to 1920.R. Tazzioli & T. Archibald - 2014 - Arch. Hist. Exact Sci 68 (5):547--597.
    In 1899, Ivar Fredholm discovered how to treat an integral equation using conceptual methods from linear algebra and use these ideas to solve certain classes of boundary value problems. He formulated a theory allowing him both to unify large classes of problems and to attack several problems fruitfully. The historical literature on the theory of integral equations has concentrated largely on the unification that was afforded by Hilbert and his school, but has not throughly investigated the roots of the subject (...)
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  • The development of the Laplace Transform, 1737–1937 II. Poincaré to Doetsch, 1880–1937.Michael A. B. Deakin - 1982 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 26 (4):351-381.
    An earlier paper, to which this is a sequel, traced the history of the Laplace Transform up to 1880. In that year Poincaré reinvented the transform, but did so in a more powerful context, that of properly conceived complex analysis. Rapid developments followed, culminating in Doetsch' work in which the transform took its modern shape.
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  • The Emergence of Biomathematics and the Case of Population Dynamics A Revival of Mechanical Reductionism and Darwinism.Giorgio Israel - 1993 - Science in Context 6 (2):469-509.
    The ArgumentThe development of modern mathematical biology took place in the 1920s in three main directions: population dynamics, population genetics, and mathematical theory of epidemics. This paper focuses on the first trend which is considered the most significant. Modern mathematical theory of population dynamics is characterized by three aspects (the first two being in a somewhat critical relationship): the emergence of the mathematical modeling approach, the attempt at establishing it in a reductionist-mechanist conceptual framework, and the revival of Darwinism. The (...)
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