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Auction archive: Lot number 275

LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856) "O nachalakh ge...

Estimate
US$150,000 - US$200,000
Price realised:
US$134,500
Auction archive: Lot number 275

LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856) "O nachalakh ge...

Estimate
US$150,000 - US$200,000
Price realised:
US$134,500
Beschreibung:

LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856). "O nachalakh geometrii" [in Russian: "On the Principles of Geometry"], in: Kazanskii vestnik, Part XXV (Feb. & Mar. 1829 pp. 178-187), Part XXV (April 1829 pp. 228-241), Part XXVII (Nov. & Dec. 1829 pp. 227-243); Part XXVIII (Mar. & Apr. 1830 pp. 251-283); Part XXVIII (July & Aug. 1830 pp. 571-636). Kazan: University Press, 1829-30.
LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856). "O nachalakh geometrii" [in Russian: "On the Principles of Geometry"], in: Kazanskii vestnik, Part XXV (Feb. & Mar. 1829 pp. 178-187), Part XXV (April 1829 pp. 228-241), Part XXVII (Nov. & Dec. 1829 pp. 227-243); Part XXVIII (Mar. & Apr. 1830 pp. 251-283); Part XXVIII (July & Aug. 1830 pp. 571-636). Kazan: University Press, 1829-30. 5 parts, 8 o (202 x 117 mm). WITH THE 2 ENGRAVED PLATES WITH FIGURES 1-17 BY MURIN RELATING TO LOBACHEVSKII, one additional engraved folding plate containing geometric diagrams, and 6 (of 9) folding letterpress tables relating to other's contributions to the periodical (one with a corner torn away affecting text). Original blue printed wrappers (all rebacked, both parts for XXV with slight rubbing and minor marginal chipping, part XXVII trimmed and mounted with blue coloring added, small hole to lower cover affecting text, part XXVIII March & Apr. with covers laid down, part XXVIII July & Aug. torn and repaired, affecting small portion of border and a few letters, and with all covers laid down). EXCEEDINGLY RARE FIRST EDITION OF THE FIRST PUBLISHED WORK ON NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY Born in Nizhni Novgorod (now Gorki), Russia, Nicolai Ivanovitch Lobatchevskii ("the Copernicus of Geometry"-- PMM ) studied at the University of Kazan from 1807 under Martin Bartels, a friend of Gauss. He received his master's degree in physics and mathematics in 1812, and was appointed professor ordinarius in 1822. During the same year he began an administrative career at the University: serving first as a member (later as chairman) of a committee formed to supervise the construction of the new university buildings, he was twice appointed dean of the department of physics and mathematics, served a ten-year term as librarian of the university, was also a rector there for nearly twenty years, and during the latter years of his career served as assistant trustee for the entire Kazan education districts from 1846-1855. The basis of what became his first published work on the subject of non-Euclidean geometry, "O nachalakh geometrii" ("On the Principles of Geometry") was first read to his colleagues at the Kazan department of physics and mathematics at a meeting held on 23 February 1826, but was not published until 1829-30 when it appeared as a series of five papers in the Kazan University Journal. "Lobachevskii's geometry represents the culmination of two thousand years of criticism of Euclid's Elements, most particularly Euclid's fifth, or parallel, postulate, which states that given a line and a point not on the line, there can be drawn through the point one and only one coplanar line not intersecting the given line. As this postulate had stubbornly resisted all attempts (including Lobachevskii's) to prove it as a theorem, Lobachevskii came to the realization that it was possible to construct a logically consistent geometry in which the Euclidean postulate represented a special case of a more general system that allowed for the possibility of hyperbolically curved space" (Norman). "O nachalakh geometrii" was misunderstood by most of Lobachevskii's contemporaries, and uncomplimentary reviews of it by mathematicians of his day began to appear, most notably from M.V. Ostrogradsky, the most famous mathematician of the St. Petersburg Academy. It was not until the latter part of the 19th century, through the further investigations of Georg Friedrich Riemann, who had studied under Gauss in Gottingen and later Berlin, that his ideas were eventually extended to break the bounds of pure mathematics. "At the same time as Lobachevsky, other geometers were making similar discoveries. Gauss had arrrived at an idea on non-Euclidean geometry in the last years of the eighteenth century and had for several decades continued to study the problems that such an idea presented. He never published his results, however, and these became known only after his death and the publication of his correspo

Auction archive: Lot number 275
Auction:
Datum:
22 Jun 2010
Auction house:
Christie's
22 June 2010, New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856). "O nachalakh geometrii" [in Russian: "On the Principles of Geometry"], in: Kazanskii vestnik, Part XXV (Feb. & Mar. 1829 pp. 178-187), Part XXV (April 1829 pp. 228-241), Part XXVII (Nov. & Dec. 1829 pp. 227-243); Part XXVIII (Mar. & Apr. 1830 pp. 251-283); Part XXVIII (July & Aug. 1830 pp. 571-636). Kazan: University Press, 1829-30.
LOBACHEVSKII, Nicolai Ivanovitch (1793-1856). "O nachalakh geometrii" [in Russian: "On the Principles of Geometry"], in: Kazanskii vestnik, Part XXV (Feb. & Mar. 1829 pp. 178-187), Part XXV (April 1829 pp. 228-241), Part XXVII (Nov. & Dec. 1829 pp. 227-243); Part XXVIII (Mar. & Apr. 1830 pp. 251-283); Part XXVIII (July & Aug. 1830 pp. 571-636). Kazan: University Press, 1829-30. 5 parts, 8 o (202 x 117 mm). WITH THE 2 ENGRAVED PLATES WITH FIGURES 1-17 BY MURIN RELATING TO LOBACHEVSKII, one additional engraved folding plate containing geometric diagrams, and 6 (of 9) folding letterpress tables relating to other's contributions to the periodical (one with a corner torn away affecting text). Original blue printed wrappers (all rebacked, both parts for XXV with slight rubbing and minor marginal chipping, part XXVII trimmed and mounted with blue coloring added, small hole to lower cover affecting text, part XXVIII March & Apr. with covers laid down, part XXVIII July & Aug. torn and repaired, affecting small portion of border and a few letters, and with all covers laid down). EXCEEDINGLY RARE FIRST EDITION OF THE FIRST PUBLISHED WORK ON NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY Born in Nizhni Novgorod (now Gorki), Russia, Nicolai Ivanovitch Lobatchevskii ("the Copernicus of Geometry"-- PMM ) studied at the University of Kazan from 1807 under Martin Bartels, a friend of Gauss. He received his master's degree in physics and mathematics in 1812, and was appointed professor ordinarius in 1822. During the same year he began an administrative career at the University: serving first as a member (later as chairman) of a committee formed to supervise the construction of the new university buildings, he was twice appointed dean of the department of physics and mathematics, served a ten-year term as librarian of the university, was also a rector there for nearly twenty years, and during the latter years of his career served as assistant trustee for the entire Kazan education districts from 1846-1855. The basis of what became his first published work on the subject of non-Euclidean geometry, "O nachalakh geometrii" ("On the Principles of Geometry") was first read to his colleagues at the Kazan department of physics and mathematics at a meeting held on 23 February 1826, but was not published until 1829-30 when it appeared as a series of five papers in the Kazan University Journal. "Lobachevskii's geometry represents the culmination of two thousand years of criticism of Euclid's Elements, most particularly Euclid's fifth, or parallel, postulate, which states that given a line and a point not on the line, there can be drawn through the point one and only one coplanar line not intersecting the given line. As this postulate had stubbornly resisted all attempts (including Lobachevskii's) to prove it as a theorem, Lobachevskii came to the realization that it was possible to construct a logically consistent geometry in which the Euclidean postulate represented a special case of a more general system that allowed for the possibility of hyperbolically curved space" (Norman). "O nachalakh geometrii" was misunderstood by most of Lobachevskii's contemporaries, and uncomplimentary reviews of it by mathematicians of his day began to appear, most notably from M.V. Ostrogradsky, the most famous mathematician of the St. Petersburg Academy. It was not until the latter part of the 19th century, through the further investigations of Georg Friedrich Riemann, who had studied under Gauss in Gottingen and later Berlin, that his ideas were eventually extended to break the bounds of pure mathematics. "At the same time as Lobachevsky, other geometers were making similar discoveries. Gauss had arrrived at an idea on non-Euclidean geometry in the last years of the eighteenth century and had for several decades continued to study the problems that such an idea presented. He never published his results, however, and these became known only after his death and the publication of his correspo

Auction archive: Lot number 275
Auction:
Datum:
22 Jun 2010
Auction house:
Christie's
22 June 2010, New York, Rockefeller Center
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