History of the function concept

From Wiki @ Karl Jones dot com
Revision as of 08:10, 9 September 2016 by Karl Jones (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "In mathematics, the concept of a function (and the name) emerged in the 17th century in connection with the development of the calculus; for exa...")

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

In mathematics, the concept of a function (and the name) emerged in the 17th century in connection with the development of the calculus; for example, the slope dy / dx of a graph at a point was regarded as a function of the x-coordinate of the point.

Description

Functions were not explicitly considered in antiquity, but some precursors of the concept can perhaps be seen in the work of medieval philosophers and mathematicians such as Oresme.

Mathematicians of the 18th century typically regarded a function as being defined by an analytic expression.

In the 19th century, the demands of the rigorous development of analysis by Weierstrass and others, the reformulation of geometry in terms of analysis, and the invention of set theory by Cantor, eventually led to the much more general modern concept of a function as a single-valued mapping from one set to another.

See also

External links