Takagi Teiji Takagi. Born 21 April 1875 in Teiji Takagi was born in a rural areaof Gifu Prefecture in central Japan. His father was an accountant http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Takagi.html
Extractions: Teiji Takagi was born in a rural area of Gifu Prefecture in central Japan. His father was an accountant on a farm in this mountainous region and Teiji was brought up on the farm on which his father worked. His mother was a devoted Buddhist and she took Teiji, when he was a young child, with her when she went to the temple. Teiji soon showed himself to be a childhood prodigy by quickly learning to recite the prayers. He attended primary school in Kazuya Village before going to middle school in Gifu entering this second stage of his education in 1886. At that time there were no mathematics texts written in Japanese so the pupils studying mathematics had to use English texts. Takagi studied Algebra for beginners by Todhunter and Geometry by Wilson. In 1891 Takagi began the third stage of his schooling which he took at the Third High School in Kyoto. There were, at that time, eight academies and the brightest pupils went to the one corresponding to the area in which they lived in order to prepare for a university education. Takagi therefore, after showing great talents at middle school, made the natural progression to Kyoto where he studied for three years. In 1894 he graduated for the Third High School and entered Tokyo University, the only university in Japan at that time.
°ª¥»sªv(Takagi Teiji 1875~1960) ¤é¥»¼Æ¾Ç®a The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://www.edp.ust.hk/math/history/3/3_146.htm
Extractions: Abstract: Today's notion of "global eld" comprises number elds (algebraic, of nite degree) and function elds (algebraic, of dimension 1, nite base eld). They have many similar arithmetic properties. The systematic study of these similarities seems to have been started by Dedekind (1857). A new impetus was given by the seminal thesis of E.Artin (1921, published in 1924). In this exposition I shall report on the development during the twenties and thirties of our century, with emphasis on the... (Update)
Autobiography J. Fang because of some remnants of the old Tokugawasamurai feudal system was still alivesomewhere in the Imperial University of Tokyo, under takagi teiji (1875-1960 http://www.cnu.edu/phil/resources/autobiography.html
Extractions: Right after the end of WW II (on 8.15), when there was hardly any paper to print anything, my cousin (editor of a left-leaning Seoul newspaper) helped me publish the above if only to prove what had been going on in the name of Korean intellectual anti-Japanese movement during the pre-War years. And the new Korean (way of spelling in phonetic alphabet a revised version of the old, originally created in 14 th C., which H.G. Wells called the worlds best, most scientific and the simplest) for my translation was the one, which had been devised for the new, forthcoming age, by the Korean Language Society, in itself a patriotic underground movement, some members of which died, or spent many years, in Japanese prisons.
Mathematics Unbound Abstracts 1881, new educational institutions like the Imperial University of Tokyo (foundedin 1886) employed faculty such as Fujisawa Rikitaro and takagi teiji who had http://www.math.virginia.edu/MathUnbound/abstracts.htm
Extractions: Acadia University (Canada) France's political transition from the Second Empire to the Third Republic was accompanied by a mathematical transition of which one remarkable feature is an increased interest in German research. In this period, French mathematicians not only studied German work, they absorbed aspects of its dominant values. The shift toward German-style pure mathematics is not mirrored in other aspects of cultural life, and special factors mediating these developments must be sought, the more so because of the anti-German sentiment in France following the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871. In this paper, I investigate the roles of Gaston Darboux and Charles Hermite in the dissemination of German work to French audiences. This was a multifaceted effort, involving the translation and publication of both abstracts and articles, the encouragement of theses on subjects of German origin, the reform of curriculum at the Paris and elsewhere, and the cultural recognition of German mathematicians through appointments to the
Takagi Teiji Takagi. Teiji Takagi graduated from Tokyo in 1897, then studied underFuchs, Frobenius and Hilbert at Berlin and Göttingen from 1897 to 1900. http://www.math.hcmuns.edu.vn/~algebra/history/history/Mathematicians/Takagi.htm
References For Takagi References for teiji takagi. Y Kawada (ed.), Recollections on Professor teijitakagi (Tokyo, 1986). T takagi, Collected papers (Berlin, 1990). http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Takagi.html
Extractions: K Honda, Teiji Takagi : A Biography, Commentarii mathematica Universitatis Sancti Pauli S Iyanaga, On the life and works of Teiji Takagi, in T Takagi, Collected papers (Berlin, 1990). List of books and papers by Teiji Takagi (1875-1960) (Japanese), Sugaku T Takagi, Reminiscences and perspectives, in Miscellaneous Notes on Mathematics (Tokyo, 1935). Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
(AUTO)BIOGRAPHIE Albert Einstein (1990). takagi, teiji. The collected papers of teiji takagi (1973) http://www.iecn.u-nancy.fr/~eguether/bibliotheque/MotCle/node3.html
Extractions: suivant: CAPES et CAPESA monter: MotCle AGREGATION Inventeurs et scientifiques. Dictionnaire de biographies. (1994) Akivis, M. A. Elie Cartan (1869-1951) (1993) Alexanderson, Gerald L. The random walks of George Polya (2000) Artin, Emil The collected papers of Emil Artin (1965) Atiyah, Michael Francis Collected works Vol. 1 (1988) Oeuvres scientifiques (1990) Belhoste, Bruno Cauchy 1789-1857 (1985) Bellman, Richard E. The Bellman continuum (1986) Bishop, Errett Selected papers (1986) Borel, Armand Oeuvres Vol. 1 (1983) Bottazzini, Umberto Brelot, Marcel Cantor, Georg Georg Cantor gesammelte Abhandlungen (1962) Cardan 1501-1576 (1991) Calaprice, Alice The expanded quotable Einstein (2000) Casacuberta, Carles Mathematical research today and tomorrow (1992) Cartan, Henri Oeuvres Vol. 1 (1979) Nicolas Bourbaki (1995) Cohen, Morton N. Lewis Carroll (1995) Dale, Andrew I. A history of inverse probability (1991) Dauben, Joseph Warren Abraham Robinson (1995) Delsarte, Jean Oeuvres de Jean Delsarte Vol. 1 (1971) Sonia Kovalevskaia 1850-1891 (1993) Deutsche Mathematike-Vereinigung Ein Jahrhundert Mathematik 1890-1990 (1990) Dugac, Pierre
Takagi Biography of teiji takagi (18751960) teiji takagi was born in a rural area of Gifu Prefecture in central Japan. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Takagi.html
Extractions: Teiji Takagi was born in a rural area of Gifu Prefecture in central Japan. His father was an accountant on a farm in this mountainous region and Teiji was brought up on the farm on which his father worked. His mother was a devoted Buddhist and she took Teiji, when he was a young child, with her when she went to the temple. Teiji soon showed himself to be a childhood prodigy by quickly learning to recite the prayers. He attended primary school in Kazuya Village before going to middle school in Gifu entering this second stage of his education in 1886. At that time there were no mathematics texts written in Japanese so the pupils studying mathematics had to use English texts. Takagi studied Algebra for beginners by Todhunter and Geometry by Wilson. In 1891 Takagi began the third stage of his schooling which he took at the Third High School in Kyoto. There were, at that time, eight academies and the brightest pupils went to the one corresponding to the area in which they lived in order to prepare for a university education. Takagi therefore, after showing great talents at middle school, made the natural progression to Kyoto where he studied for three years. In 1894 he graduated for the Third High School and entered Tokyo University, the only university in Japan at that time.
Takagi Portraits Portraits of teiji takagi teiji takagi. JOC/EFR August 2001 http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/PictDisplay/Takagi.html
Biography-center - Letter T Takacs, Karoly www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/heroes/bio_uk.asp?PAR_I_ID=5664; takagi,teiji wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/takagi.html; http://www.biography-center.com/t.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 340 biographies Tabern, Donalee L.
~? ?(Teiji Takagi, 1875~1960)~ The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://members.tripod.lycos.co.kr/babo25/math1.htm
PHILOSOPHIE 4 (1979). takagi, teiji. The collected papers of teiji takagi (1973) http://www.iecn.u-nancy.fr/~eguether/bibliotheque/MotCle/node10.html
Extractions: suivant: RECREATION MATHEMATIQUE monter: MotCle OEUVRES Bachelard, Gaston Les intuitions atomistiques (1933) Badiou, Alain Boniface, Jacqueline Borel, Emile Oeuvres de Emile Borel Vol. 4 (1972) Borel, Emile Selecta (1940) Bouligand, Georges Cantor, Georg Georg Cantor gesammelte Abhandlungen (1962) Cantor, Georg Cartier, Pierre Cartier, Pierre Casacuberta, Carles Mathematical research today and tomorrow (1992) Curry, Haskell B. Outlines of a formalist philosophy of mathematics (1951) Delahaye, Jean-Paul L'intelligence et le calcul (2002) Ewald, William From Kant to Hilbert Vol. 1 (1996) Ewald, William From Kant to Hilbert Vol. 2 (1996) Hintikka, Jaakko The principles of mathematics revisited (1996) Jacquette, Dale Philosophy of mathematics (2002) Jeans, James H. Les nouvelles bases philosophiques de la science (1935) Kac, Mark Discrete thoughts. Essays on mathematics, science, and philosophy (1986) Kobzarev, I. Yu. Elementary particles. Mathematics, physics and philosophy (1989) Mancosu, Paolo From Brouwer to Hilbert (1998) Meinong, A.
Teiji Nishizawa - ResearchIndex Document Query Debain.. (2002) (Correct) takagi curve In 1903 the number theory specialistTeiji takagi introduced a curve called takagi curve. www http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs?q=Teiji Nishizawa
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Index Of TAK takagi, Masako, University of Maryland College Park, 1990. takagi, teiji, TokyoImperial University, 1903. Takahashi, Joji, University of MinnesotaMinneapolis,1982. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/letter.phtml?letter=TAK
Poster Of Takagi teiji takagi. was born 128 years ago http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Posters/421.html
Index For The Letter T names beginning with the letter T. Tagamlitzki, Yaroslav; Tai, Kuochung;Taitslin, Mikhail; takagi, teiji; Takasu, S. Tamarkin, JD; http://sigact.acm.org/genealogy/index-T.html
The Tribune - Windows - Mind Games the nature of the elements (which are not necessarily numbers), butin the way elements are composed. teiji takagi (18751960). http://www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20021123/windows/mind.htm
Extractions: Teiji Takagi (1875-1960) K AZUYA village near Gifu in the 19-century central Japan: Teiji, son of an accountant on a farm in this mountainous region, discovers a secret in the cupboard of his authoritarian father. It is a Samurai sword, weapon of the emperor's chosen soldiers; there is no reason for it to be in the house of an accountant. Teiji reads the words inscribed on the metal: "COURAGE IS IN THE MIND", then, hearing his father's footsteps, quickly, puts the sword back in. "You didn't go to school today; where have you been all day?" says Takagi Senior to his son. "Mother took me to the temple of Buddha for the first time; I was there all day," says Teiji. "Which prayer did you hear there?" says the old man, with suspicion in the eyes. The child starts reciting the prayers he had heard in the temple; he has memorised all, something that even the head priest can't do. The courage with which he faced his father surprises even Teiji. Soon, he enters middle school in Gifu in 1886, where mathematics text are not written in Japanese, so, the pupils use English texts to study mathematics. The first books that he reads there are Algebra for Beginners by Todhunter and Geometry by Wilson. His academic brilliance takes him to the Third High School in Kyoto, after three years of which, he enters Tokyo University, the only university in Japan in 1894. Here he learns advanced mathematics more by reading books than from lecture courses that he attended. He learns about algebraic curves from George Salmon's book and he also studies Serret's Algèbre Supérieure. He is among the first ones to read Heinrich Weber's algebra text when it arrives in Japan.