A History of Forgetting, and the “Awful Problem” of “Race”: A New Historical Note

2009 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-31
Author(s):  
Matthew Wilson
Keyword(s):  
1950 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 416-421
Author(s):  
W. E. May

The publication of the paper Astro-fix by Computation by Oliver C. Collins in the April number of the Journal serves as a reminder that the observation for the determination of the latitude from two altitudes, usually known as the double altitude problem, is one of some celebrity in the history of navigation.The following notes on the subject may be of some interest although they are far from complete, having been compiled from such books as happened to be readily available, and can only be considered as an introduction to the subject.


1989 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. 370-377
Author(s):  
Frank J. Swetz

Many teachers believe that the history of mathematics, if incorporated into school lessons, can do much to enrich its teaching. If this enrichment is just the inclusion of more factual knowledge in an already crowded curriculum, the utility and appeal of historical materials for the classroom teacher is limited. Thus to include a historical note in a student's text on the life or work of a particular mathematician may shed a historical perspective on the content, but does it actually encourage learning or illuminate the concept being taught? The benefits of this practice can be debated.


Terminus ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2 (59)) ◽  
pp. 97-133
Author(s):  
Grzegorz Franczak

Polotia recepta. A Map of the Principality of Polatsk: Texts and Pretexts of thePower Dispute This study discusses an important aspect of a political message conveyed by Stanisław Pachołowiecki’s map, published in 1580 by G.B Cavalieri’s printing house in Rome as part of The Atlas of the Principality of Polatsk – Descriptio Ducatus Polocensis. The message in question is one of the paratexts, presenting a detailed historical note on Polatsk and the Principality. The main goal of the study is to prove a double hypothesis, first that the note on Polatsk was a key argument legitimising the rule of Stephen Báthory – contested by Tsar Ivan the Terrible – not only over the small territory under dispute but over the whole Great Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and second, that the decision to aim the first Polish-Lithuanian military offensive in the 1577–1582 war at Polatsk was motivated by political rather than military or strategic considerations. In section I, preliminary assumptions, theses and research methods are presented. Then, in section II, the context of the propaganda campaign, as Pachołowiecki’s map ideological framework, is introduced. This is followed by a critical analysis of the historical note, based on Polish and Ruthenian-Lithuanian sources (III.1). The next section (III.2) demonstrates that Polatsk held a central place in the Muscovite political discourse. Having proclaimed himself a heir to the throne of the Great Duchy and to the crown of Poland, Ivan the Terrible seized the land of Polatsk, and the efficient Muscovite diplomacy started to assert the tsar’s alleged dynastic claim to Lithuania and Poland. In this way, the manipulated history of the “recovered Polatsk”, Polotia recepta, argued to be a historical part of Lithuania, can be seen as a reply to the Muscovite discourse of power drawing on dynastic claims to a non-existent duchy, and the key matter is the legitimisation of elective monarchy as opposed to hereditary one. Having discussed the theatrical and iconic form of the Polish triumph over Ivan the Terrible (III.3), the author highlights the long life of the political myth of the Polatsk statehood and its sign ificance for today’s Belarusian identity discourse.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 201-204
Author(s):  
Louise Makarem Oliveira ◽  
Nícollas Nunes Rabelo ◽  
Vitor Hugo Honorato Pereira ◽  
Neiffer Nunes Rabelo ◽  
Carlos Umberto Pereira

Johann Otto Leonhardt Heubner (1843-1926) was an exceptional physician who devoted his work to the Charité Children’s Clinic of Berlin University, where he earned the title of “father of German pediatrics”. However, Heubner’s scientific discoveries were not limited to a specific field. His early research, for instance, focused on anatomical studies of the brain’s circulation, and culminated in the description of both Heubner’s disease (syphilitic endarteritis) and the recurrent artery of Heubner: a structure of utmost importance to neurosurgeons. This article aims to make a brief history of Heubner and depict some of his most remarkable contributions to medicine.


1976 ◽  
Vol 69 (7) ◽  
pp. 586-593
Author(s):  
Phillip S. Jones
Keyword(s):  

This bicentennial year naturally turns our thoughts back to colonial times, back to vignettes of 1776. However, there are two reasons for including a longer span in a historical note. First, history is both more interesting and more valuable when it analyzes forces and issues operating over a longer interval of time. Second, there was relatively little of mathematical or pedagogical importance going on in the America of 1776.


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