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Bolzano's and published
Today he is mostly remembered for the Bolzano – Weierstrass theorem, which Karl Weierstrass developed independently and published years after Bolzano's first proof and which was initially called the Weierstrass theorem until Bolzano's earlier work was rediscovered.

Bolzano's and work
Real analysis began to emerge as an independent subject when Bernard Bolzano introduced the modern definition of continuity in 1816, but Bolzano's work did not become widely known until the 1870s.
Bolzano's main claim to fame, however, is his 1837 Wissenschaftslehre ( Theory of Science ), a work in four volumes that covered not only philosophy of science in the modern sense but also logic, epistemology and scientific pedagogy.
Bolzano's philosophical work encouraged a more abstract reading of when a demonstration could be regarded as analytic, where a proof is analytic if it does not go beyond its subject matter ( Sebastik 2007 ).

Bolzano's and was
Bolzano's proof relied on the method of bisection: the sequence was placed into an interval that was then divided into two equal parts, and a part containing infinitely many terms of the sequence was selected.
The full significance of Bolzano's theorem, and its method of proof, would not emerge until almost 50 years later when it was rediscovered by Karl Weierstrass.
) It was during this period that the idea of a truly national literature and culture developed, as a rejection of Bernard Bolzano's vision of a bi-lingual and bi-cultural Czech-German state.
Bolzano's notion of a limit was similar to the modern one: that a limit, rather than being a relation among infinitesimals, must instead be cast in terms of how the dependent variable approaches a definite quantity as the independent variable approaches some other definite quantity.

Bolzano's and greatly
( Bolzano's use of the term an sich differs greatly from that of Kant ; for Kant's use of the term see an sich.

Bolzano's and by
Bolzano's original claim is that the logical realm is populated by objects of the latter kind.
Bolzano's notion of proposition is fairly broad: " A rectangle is round " is a proposition-even though it is false by virtue of self-contradiction-because it is composed in an intelligible manner out of intelligible parts.
W. Schultz, Leipzig I-II 1929, III 1980, IV 1931 ; Critical edition edited by Jan Berg: Bolzano's Gesamtausgabe, voll.

Bolzano's and .
Satz an Sich is a basic notion in Bolzano's Wissenschaftslehre.
Bolzano's primary concern is with the concrete objective meaning: with concrete objective truths or truths in themselves.
Bolzano's Logic.

posthumously and published
* Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories ( short stories collected posthumously, also published as Miss Marple's Final Cases, but only six of the eight stories actually feature Miss Marple ) ( written between 1939 and 1954, published 1979 )
Ampère's final work, published posthumously, was Essai sur la philosophie des sciences, ou exposition analytique d ' une classification naturelle de toutes les connaissances humaines (" Essay on the philosophy of science or analytical exposition on the natural classification of human knowledge ").
In addition to Triumphant Democracy ( 1886 ), and The Gospel of Wealth ( 1889 ), he also wrote An American Four-in-hand in Britain ( 1883 ), Round the World ( 1884 ), The Empire of Business ( 1902 ), The Secret of Business is the Management of Men ( 1903 ), James Watt ( 1905 ) in the Famous Scots Series, Problems of Today ( 1907 ), and his posthumously published autobiography Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie ( 1920 ).
" The Four Books on Human Proportion " were published posthumously, shortly after his death in 1528 at the age of fifty-six.
: Two Hebrew volumes were published during his lifetime by Soncino Press, and the third Hebrew volume was published posthumously by JTS Press in the 1990s.
A great deal of her work, including Delta of Venus and Little Birds, was published posthumously.
Housman also wrote a parodic Fragment of a Greek Tragedy, in English, and humorous poems published posthumously under the title Unkind to Unicorns.
Many of his works were published posthumously in the first decades after his death.
Tickell: " Here let me trace beneath the purpled morn, The deep-mouth'd beagle, and the sprightly horn " To a Lady before Marriage ( published posthumously in 1749 )
A final folktale, Wag by Wall, was published posthumously by The Horn Book in 1944.
In his posthumously published 1981 book The Anglo-American Establishment, Georgetown University history professor Carroll Quigley explained that the Balfour Declaration was actually drafted by Lord Alfred Milner.
Seki's discovery was posthumously published in 1712 in his work Katsuyo Sampo ; Bernoulli's, also posthumously, in his Ars Conjectandi of 1713.
His paper, Theoria Interpolationis Methodo Nova Tractata, was only published posthumously in Volume 3 of his collected works.
Charlotte's first-written novel, The Professor, was published posthumously in 1857.
* The Professor, written before Jane Eyre, submitted at first along with Wuthering Heights and Agnes Grey, then separately, and rejected in either form by many publishing houses, published posthumously in 1857
* Emma, unfinished ; Charlotte Brontë wrote only 20 pages of the manuscript, published posthumously in 1860.
Stoker's posthumously published short story " Dracula's Guest ", known as the deleted first chapter to Dracula, shows a more obvious and intact debt to " Carmilla ": Both stories are told in the first person.
That the curve followed by a chain is not a parabola was proven by Joachim Jungius ( 1587 – 1657 ); this result was published posthumously in 1669.
1875 ( published posthumously )
The Library of Congress has the following publications by Eastman in its collection, much of it published posthumously:
* La Religieuse, Roman ( 1760 ; revised in 1770 and in the early 1780s ; the novel was first published as a volume posthumously in 1796 ).
* Paradoxe sur le comédien ( written between 1770 and 1778 ; first published posthumously in 1830 )

posthumously and work
This profoundly elegiac work, composed at unaccustomed speed and posthumously premièred, has become Berg's best-known and beloved composition.
( In addition to fueling Moore's own work, the " Here is one hand " argument also deeply influenced Wittgenstein, who spent his last years working out a new approach to Moore's argument in the remarks that were published posthumously as On Certainty.
In 1980, Wood was posthumously given the accolade of ' Worst Director of All Time ' at the Golden Turkey Awards, and revival of interest in his work followed.
The work was completed by Audubon's sons and son-in-law and was published posthumously.
His major defining work after Stalin's death, the Critique de la raison dialectique ( Critique of Dialectical Reason ), appeared in 1960 ( a second volume appearing posthumously ).
Volumes II and III remained mere manuscripts upon which Marx continued to work for the rest of his life and were published posthumously by Engels.
Much of Jacobi's work was published posthumously in the 1860s, generating enormous interest in France and Germany ( Hawkins, p. 43 ).
Independently, the cardinal-nephew of Pope Adrian IV, Cardinal Boso intended to extend the Liber Pontificalis from where it left off with Stephen V, although his work was only published posthumously as the Gesta Romanorum Pontificum alongside the Liber Censuum of Pope Honorius III.
His work was published posthumously by his pupil, Guillaume de Morlaye ( born c. 1510 ), who, however, did not pick up the complex polyphony of de Rippe.
Nevertheless, he was posthumously acknowledged to be one of the foremost rabbinical arbiters and philosophers in Jewish history, his copious work a cornerstone of Jewish scholarship.
* Bernard Williams: A British moral philosopher whose posthumously published work on political philosophy ' In the Beginning was the Deed ' has been seen-along with the works of Raymond Geuss-as a key foundational work on Political Realism.
Goldberg's work was commemorated posthumously in 1995 with the inclusion of Rube Goldberg's Inventions, depicting Professor Butts ' " Self-Operating Napkin " in the Comic Strip Classics series of U. S. postage stamps.
One further work of Germain's on elasticity was published posthumously in 1831: her “ Memoir sur la courbure des surfaces .” She used the mean curvature in her research ( see Honors in Number Theory ).
After several other publications, some reflecting his interest in and knowledge of continental Europe, Bowdler's last work was an expurgated version of Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, published posthumously in 1826 under the supervision of his nephew and biographer, Thomas Bowdler the Younger.
* 1485 – Leon Battista Alberti's De Re Aedificatoria ( written 1443 – 52 and published posthumously ) becomes the first printed work on architecture.
His work was significantly edited and updated by Richard Price before it was posthumously read at the Royal Society.
The movement originated from the posthumously published work of the Dutch theologian Cornelius Jansen, who died in 1638.
In 2010, he was posthumously awarded a Scientific and Technical Academy Award for his work at Filmlight on the Northlight scanner technology.
In 1982 his major work, Mekor Chaim, was finally published posthumously by Mechon Yerushalayim.
The work was published posthumously.

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