Saltar al contento

Richard Dedekind

De Wikipedia, le encyclopedia libere
Richard Dedekind
Sexo mascule
Nascentia 1831-10-06 (Braunschweig)
Decesso 1916-02-12 (Braunschweig)
Loco de reposo Braunschweig Main Cemetery[*]
Citatania Duchy of Brunswick[*]
Educate in Georg-August-Universität Göttingen[*], Frederick William University Berlin[*], Collegium Carolinum[*], Martino-Katharineum[*]
Occupation mathematico, philosopho[*], professor universitari[*]
Obras notabile Stetigkeit und Irrationale Zahlen[*], Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen?[*], Über die Theorie der ganzen algebraischen Zahlen[*], Dedekind cut[*], Dedekind's isomorphism theorem[*], Dedekind domain[*], Dedekind–Kummer theorem[*], construction of the real numbers[*], Dedekind eta function[*], Dedekind zeta function[*], Dedekind psi function[*], Dedekind–Hasse norm[*], Cantor–Dedekind axiom[*], Dedekind group[*], Dedekind-infinite set[*], Dedekind sum[*], Dedekind number[*], least-upper-bound property[*]
Parentes matre Caroline Marie Henriette Emperius[*] patre Julius Dedekind[*]
Fratres/sorores Julie Dedekind[*], Adolf Dedekind[*]
Lingua germano
Identificatores
ISNI 0000000121373648
VIAF 66545704
Commons
Richard Dedekind
R. Dedekind (1850)

Julius Wilhelm Richard Dedekind (* 6 de octobre 1831 in Braunschweig; † 12 de februario 1916 mesme citate) esteva un mathematico german. Su nomine porta le anellos de Dedekind, le function η de Dedekind, le function ζ de Dedekind, multe altere notiones e diverse theoremas.

Dedekind recercava in le theoria del ideales, le theoria de numeros, le analysis e altere campos. In 1872, in su scripto Stetigkeit und Irrationalzahlen (= Continuitate e numeros rational) illo como le prime definiva le numeros real con adjuta del sectiones de Dedekind. In 1888, Dedekind dava le prime introduction exacte per axiomas in le numeros natural per su scripto Was sind und was sollen die Zahlen? (= Que es e que significa le numeros?).[1]

Referentias

[modificar | modificar fonte]
  1. Hubert Kennedy: The origins of modern Axiomatics, in: American Mathematical monthly, 79 (1972), 133–136.