| Perry Fairfax Nursey - Industrial arts - 1846 - 536 pages
...Gilbert, than to any respect to the author, his subject, or 87 his mode of treating it, that the honour was accorded to him. The elementary character of the...reprinted in the Ladies' Diary for 1838 ; and most of onr readers are doubtless acquainted with it. That the mode in which it is drawn up is itt one respect... | |
| Science - 1907 - 840 pages
...edited by TS Davies, W. Rutherford and S. Fenwick, London, Vol. I., 1845, pp. 74-76. says Da vies, "was the professed objection; his recondite mode of...it was the professed passport for its admission." Homer's third article was a simplification of the principles of his process. He still shows a very... | |
| William Codman Sturgis - Myxomycetes - 1907 - 848 pages
...Mathematician, edited by TS Davies, W. Rutherford and S. Fenwick, London, Vol. I., 1845, pp. 74-76. says Davies, "was the professed objection; his recondite mode of...it was the professed passport for its admission." Horner's third article was a simplification of the principles of his process. He still shows a very... | |
| American Mathematical Society - Mathematics - 1911 - 698 pages
...first paper in the Philosophical Transactions. "The elementary character of the subject," says Davies, "was the professed objection : his recondite mode...it, was the professed passport for its admission." Horner's third article was a simplification of the principles of his process. In this article he says... | |
| Florian Cajori - Mathematics - 1919 - 562 pages
...was made to the insertion of the paper. "The elementary character of the subject," said TS Davies, "was the professed objection ; his recondite mode...it was the professed passport for its admission." A second article of Horner on his method was refused publication in the Philosophical Transactions,... | |
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