Jeanne Peiffer Explained

Jeanne Peiffer (born 20 August 1948 in Mersch) is a Luxembourg historian of mathematics. She is Emeritus Research Director at the CNRS, at the Center Alexandre Koyré of the CNRS, and at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS).

Biography

Peiffer studied at the University of Luxembourg where she was a professor after being a student of René Taton.

She was co-editor (with) of the correspondence of Johann Bernoulli (Birkhäuser 1988, 1992) and published a French translation of the geometry of Albrecht Dürer. With Amy Dahan, she wrote a popular French-language history of mathematics that was translated into English and German.[1] [2] From 1995 to 2015 she was co-editor of the and co-editor of Historia Mathematica.

She deals with scientific journals in the 17th and 18th centuries, also from a scientific sociological point of view and with the aspect of the history of the specialization of mathematics journals, with perspective in the Renaissance in connection with geometry and optics, and the letter as a communication tool of mathematics in the 18th century.

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Eaton . Charles . Review of History of mathematics: highways and byways . The Mathematical Gazette . 2011 . 95 . 532 . 149–150 . 10.1017/S0025557200002643 . 23248650 . 20 November 2024 . 0025-5572. subscription .
  2. Publications Reviewed Works: ... History of Mathematics: Highways and Byways by Amy Dahan-Dalmedico and Jeanne Peiffer . The Mathematics Teacher . 2011 . 105 . 3 . 237 . 10.5951/mathteacher.105.3.0236 . 10.5951/mathteacher.105.3.0236 . 20 November 2024 . 0025-5769. subscription .