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Leonard Eugene Dickson

Leonard Eugene Dickson (January 22, 1874 – January 17, 1954) was an American mathematician. He was one of the first American researchers in abstract algebra, in particular the theory of finite fields and classical groups, and is also remembered for a three-volume history of number theory, History of the Theory of Numbers. The L. E. Dickson instructorships at the University of Chicago Department of Mathematics are named after him.

Leonard Eugene Dickson
Born(1874-01-22)January 22, 1874
DiedJanuary 17, 1954(1954-01-17) (aged 79)
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (Ph.D., 1896)
Known forCayley–Dickson construction
Dickson's conjecture
Dickson's lemma
Dickson invariant
Dickson polynomial
Modular invariant theory
AwardsNewcomb Cleveland Prize (1923)
Cole Prize in Algebra (1928)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago
Thesis The Analytic Representation of Substitutions on a Power of a Prime Number of Letters with a Discussion of the Linear Group  (1896)
Doctoral advisorE. H. Moore
Doctoral students

Life edit

Dickson considered himself a Texan by virtue of having grown up in Cleburne, where his father was a banker, merchant, and real estate investor. He attended the University of Texas at Austin, where George Bruce Halsted encouraged his study of mathematics. Dickson earned a B.S. in 1893 and an M.S. in 1894, under Halsted's supervision. Dickson first specialised in Halsted's own specialty, geometry.[1]

Both the University of Chicago and Harvard University welcomed Dickson as a Ph.D. student, and Dickson initially accepted Harvard's offer, but chose to attend Chicago instead. In 1896, when he was only 22 years of age, he was awarded Chicago's first doctorate in mathematics, for a dissertation titled The Analytic Representation of Substitutions on a Power of a Prime Number of Letters with a Discussion of the Linear Group, supervised by E. H. Moore.

Dickson then went to Leipzig and Paris to study under Sophus Lie and Camille Jordan, respectively. On returning to the US, he became an instructor at the University of California. In 1899 and at the extraordinarily young age of 25, Dickson was appointed associate professor at the University of Texas. Chicago countered by offering him a position in 1900, and he spent the balance of his career there. At Chicago, he supervised 53 Ph.D. theses; his most accomplished student was probably A. A. Albert. He was a visiting professor at the University of California in 1914, 1918, and 1922. In 1939, he returned to Texas to retire.

Dickson married Susan McLeod Davis in 1902; they had two children, Campbell and Eleanor.

Dickson was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1913, and was also a member of the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the London Mathematical Society, the French Academy of Sciences and the Union of Czech Mathematicians and Physicists. Dickson was the first recipient of a prize created in 1924 by The American Association for the Advancement of Science, for his work on the arithmetics of algebras. Harvard (1936) and Princeton (1941) awarded him honorary doctorates.

Dickson presided over the American Mathematical Society in 1917–1918. His December 1918 presidential address, titled "Mathematics in War Perspective", criticized American mathematics for falling short of those of Britain, France, and Germany:

"Let it not again become possible that thousands of young men shall be so seriously handicapped in their Army and Navy work by lack of adequate preparation in mathematics."

In 1928, he was also the first recipient of the Cole Prize for algebra, awarded annually by the AMS, for his book Algebren und ihre Zahlentheorie.

It appears that Dickson was a hard man:

"A hard-bitten character, Dickson tended to speak his mind bluntly; he was always sparing in his praise for the work of others. ... he indulged his serious passions for bridge and billiards and reportedly did not like to lose at either game."[2]
"He delivered terse and unpolished lectures and spoke sternly to his students. ... Given Dickson's intolerance for student weaknesses in mathematics, however, his comments could be harsh, even though not intended to be personal. He did not aim to make students feel good about themselves."[3]
"Dickson had a sudden death trial for his prospective doctoral students: he assigned a preliminary problem which was shorter than a dissertation problem, and if the student could solve it in three months, Dickson would agree to oversee the graduate student's work. If not the student had to look elsewhere for an advisor."[3]

Work edit

Dickson had a major impact on American mathematics, especially abstract algebra. His mathematical output consists of 18 books and more than 250 papers. The Collected Mathematical Papers of Leonard Eugene Dickson fill six large volumes.

The algebraist edit

In 1901, Dickson published his first book Linear groups with an exposition of the Galois field theory, a revision and expansion of his Ph.D. thesis. Teubner in Leipzig published the book, as there was no well-established American scientific publisher at the time. Dickson had already published 43 research papers in the preceding five years; all but seven on finite linear groups. Parshall (1991) described the book as follows:

"Dickson presented a unified, complete, and general theory of the classical linear groups—not merely over the prime field GF(p) as Jordan had done—but over the general finite field GF(pn), and he did this against the backdrop of a well-developed theory of these underlying fields. ... his book represented the first systematic treatment of finite fields in the mathematical literature."

An appendix in this book lists the non-abelian simple groups then known having order less than 1 billion. He listed 53 of the 56 having order less than 1 million. The remaining three were found in 1960, 1965, and 1967.

Dickson worked on finite fields and extended the theory of linear associative algebras initiated by Joseph Wedderburn and Cartan.

He started the study of modular invariants of a group.

In 1905, Wedderburn, then at Chicago on a Carnegie Fellowship, published a paper that included three claimed proofs of a theorem stating that all finite division algebras were commutative, now known as Wedderburn's theorem. The proofs all made clever use of the interplay between the additive group of a finite division algebra A, and the multiplicative group A* = A − {0}. Karen Parshall noted that the first of these three proofs had a gap not noticed at the time. Dickson also found a proof of this result but, believing Wedderburn's first proof to be correct, Dickson acknowledged Wedderburn's priority. But Dickson also noted that Wedderburn constructed his second and third proofs only after having seen Dickson's proof. She concluded that Dickson should be credited with the first correct proof.[4]

Dickson's search for a counterexample to Wedderburn's theorem led him to investigate nonassociative algebras, and in a series of papers he found all possible three and four-dimensional (nonassociative) division algebras over a field.

In 1919 Dickson constructed Cayley numbers by a doubling process starting with quaternions  .[5] His method was extended to a doubling of   to produce  , and of   to produce   by A. A. Albert in 1922, and the procedure is known now as the Cayley–Dickson construction of composition algebras.

The number theorist edit

Dickson proved many interesting results in number theory, using results of Vinogradov to deduce the ideal Waring theorem in his investigations of additive number theory. He proved the Waring's problem for   under the further condition of

 

independently of Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai who proved it for   ahead of him.[6]

The three-volume History of the Theory of Numbers (1919–23) is still much consulted today, covering divisibility and primality, Diophantine analysis, and quadratic and higher forms. The work contains little interpretation and makes no attempt to contextualize the results being described, yet it contains essentially every significant number theoretic idea from the dawn of mathematics up to the 1920s except for quadratic reciprocity and higher reciprocity laws. A planned fourth volume on these topics was never written. A. A. Albert remarked that this three volume work "would be a life's work by itself for a more ordinary man."

Bibliography edit

  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (1958) [1901], Magnus, Wilhelm (ed.), Linear groups: With an exposition of the Galois field theory, Dover Phoenix editions, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-49548-4, MR 0104735[7][8] (online hathitrust. B.G. Teubner's Sammlung von lehrbüchern auf dem gebiete der mathematischen wissenschaften mit einschluss ihrer anwendungen. Bd. VI. B. G. Teubner. 1901.)
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (1903) [1903], Introduction to the theory of algebraic equations, New York: John Wiley & Sons[9] (online hathitrust. J. Wiley & Sons. 1903.)
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2010) [1914], Linear algebras, Reprinting of Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, No. 16, Naub press, ISBN 978-1-178-36805-5, MR 0118745[10]
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2010) [1914], Algebraic invariants, Cornell University Library, ISBN 978-1-4297-0042-9[11]
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2004) [1914], On invariants and the theory of numbers, Dover Phoenix editions, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-43828-3, MR 0201389[12]
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2009) [1914], Elementary theory of equations, Cornell University Library, ISBN 978-1-112-27988-1
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2005) [1919], History of the theory of numbers. Vol. I: Divisibility and primality., New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-44232-7, MR 0245499[13]
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2005) [1920], History of the theory of numbers. Vol. II: Diophantine analysis, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-44233-4, MR 0245500[14]
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2005) [1923], History of the theory of numbers. Vol. III: Quadratic and higher forms, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-44234-1, MR 0245501
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (2009) [1922], First course in the theory of equations, University of Michigan Library
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (1960) [1923], Algebras and their arithmetics, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-60616-3, MR 0111764[15]
  • 1926. Modern algebraic theories[16]
  • 1923, 1928. Algebraic Numbers. Report with others for U. S. National Research Council.
  • 1929. Introduction to the Theory of Numbers[17]
  • 1930. Studies in the Theory of Numbers[18]
  • 1935. (with G. A. Bliss) "Biographical Memoir of Eliakim Hastings Moore 1862–1932."
  • 1935. Researches on Waring's problem
  • 1938. (with Hans Frederick Blichfeldt and George Abram Miller) Theory and Applications of Finite Groups
  • 1938. Algebras And Their Arithmetics (1st edn. in 1923)
  • 1939. Modern Elementary Theory of Numbers
  • 1939. New First Course in the Theory of Equations
  • Plane Trigonometry With Practical Applications
  • Dickson, Leonard Eugene (1975), Albert, A. Adrian (ed.), The collected mathematical papers of Leonard Eugene Dickson, vol. I–VI, New York: AMS Chelsea Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8284-0273-6, MR 0749229 MR0441665

Notes edit

  1. ^ A. A. Albert (1955) Leonard Eugene Dickson 1874–1954 from National Academy of Sciences
  2. ^ Karen Parshall (1999) "Leonard Eugene Dickson" in American National Biography, volume 6, Oxford University Press, pp 578–79
  3. ^ a b Fenster, D. D. (1997). "Role modeling in mathematics: the case of Leonard Eugene Dickson (1874–1954)". Historia Mathematica. 24: 7–24. doi:10.1006/hmat.1997.2120.
  4. ^ Parshall, Karen (1983). "In pursuit of the finite division algebra theorem and beyond: Joseph H M Wedderburn, Leonard Dickson, and Oswald Veblen". Archives of International History of Science. 33: 274–99.
  5. ^ Dickson, L. E. (1919), "On Quaternions and Their Generalization and the History of the Eight Square Theorem", Annals of Mathematics, 2nd, 20 (3): 155–171, doi:10.2307/1967865, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 1967865
  6. ^ Number Theory. Universities Press. 2003. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-81-7371-454-2. Retrieved July 15, 2013.
  7. ^ Miller, G. A. (1902). "Review: Linear Groups with an Exposition of the Galois Field Theory, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 9 (2): 165–172. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1902-00970-1.
  8. ^ Karen Parshall (1991) "A study in group theory: Leonard Eugene Dickson's Linear groups", Mathematical Intelligencer 13: 7–11
  9. ^ Miller, G. A. (1904). "Review: Introduction to the Theory of Algebraic Equations, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 10 (8): 411–412. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1904-01143-x.
  10. ^ Graustein, William Caspar (1915). "Review: Linear Algebra, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 21 (10): 511–522. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1915-02690-x.
  11. ^ Carmichael, R. D. (1916). "Review: Algebraic Invariants, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 22 (4): 197–199. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1916-02758-3.
  12. ^ Glenn, Oliver Edmunds (1915). "Review: Part I: On Invariants and the Theory of Numbers, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 21 (9): 464–470. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1915-02689-3.
  13. ^ Lehmer, D. N. (1919). "Review: History of the Theory of Numbers, by L. E. Dickson. Volume I" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 26 (3): 125–132. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1919-03280-7.
  14. ^ Vandiver, H. S. (1924). "Review; History of the Theory of Numbers, by L. E. Dickson. Volume II, Diophantine Analysis. Volume III, Quadratic and Higher Forms, (with a chapter on the class number by George Hoffman Cresse)" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 30 (1): 65–70. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1924-03852-X.
  15. ^ Hazlett, O. C. (1924). "Review: Algebras and their Arithmetics, by L. E. Dickson and Corpi Numerici e Algebre, by Gaetano Scorza" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 30 (5): 263–270. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1924-03899-3.
  16. ^ Bell, E. T. (1926). "Review: Modern Algebraic Theories, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 32 (6): 707–710. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1926-04303-2.
  17. ^ Bell, E. T. (1930). "Review: Introduction to the Theory of Numbers, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 36 (7): 455–459. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1930-04968-x.
  18. ^ Uspensky, J. V. (1932). "Review: Studies in the Theory of Numbers, by L. E. Dickson" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 38 (7): 463–465. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1932-05419-2.

External links edit

leonard, eugene, dickson, january, 1874, january, 1954, american, mathematician, first, american, researchers, abstract, algebra, particular, theory, finite, fields, classical, groups, also, remembered, three, volume, history, number, theory, history, theory, . Leonard Eugene Dickson January 22 1874 January 17 1954 was an American mathematician He was one of the first American researchers in abstract algebra in particular the theory of finite fields and classical groups and is also remembered for a three volume history of number theory History of the Theory of Numbers The L E Dickson instructorships at the University of Chicago Department of Mathematics are named after him Leonard Eugene DicksonBorn 1874 01 22 January 22 1874Independence Iowa USDiedJanuary 17 1954 1954 01 17 aged 79 Harlingen Texas USAlma materUniversity of Chicago Ph D 1896 Known forCayley Dickson constructionDickson s conjectureDickson s lemmaDickson invariantDickson polynomialModular invariant theoryAwardsNewcomb Cleveland Prize 1923 Cole Prize in Algebra 1928 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsUniversity of ChicagoThesisThe Analytic Representation of Substitutions on a Power of a Prime Number of Letters with a Discussion of the Linear Group 1896 Doctoral advisorE H MooreDoctoral studentsAbraham Adrian Albert Frances Baker Olive Hazlett Mabel Gweneth Humphreys Ralph James Burton W Jones Claiborne Latimer Mayme Logsdon Cyrus MacDuffee Ivan M Niven Alexander Oppenheim Gordon Pall Mina Rees Arnold Ross Marion Elizabeth Stark John Williamson Contents 1 Life 2 Work 3 The algebraist 4 The number theorist 5 Bibliography 6 Notes 7 External linksLife editDickson considered himself a Texan by virtue of having grown up in Cleburne where his father was a banker merchant and real estate investor He attended the University of Texas at Austin where George Bruce Halsted encouraged his study of mathematics Dickson earned a B S in 1893 and an M S in 1894 under Halsted s supervision Dickson first specialised in Halsted s own specialty geometry 1 Both the University of Chicago and Harvard University welcomed Dickson as a Ph D student and Dickson initially accepted Harvard s offer but chose to attend Chicago instead In 1896 when he was only 22 years of age he was awarded Chicago s first doctorate in mathematics for a dissertation titled The Analytic Representation of Substitutions on a Power of a Prime Number of Letters with a Discussion of the Linear Group supervised by E H Moore Dickson then went to Leipzig and Paris to study under Sophus Lie and Camille Jordan respectively On returning to the US he became an instructor at the University of California In 1899 and at the extraordinarily young age of 25 Dickson was appointed associate professor at the University of Texas Chicago countered by offering him a position in 1900 and he spent the balance of his career there At Chicago he supervised 53 Ph D theses his most accomplished student was probably A A Albert He was a visiting professor at the University of California in 1914 1918 and 1922 In 1939 he returned to Texas to retire Dickson married Susan McLeod Davis in 1902 they had two children Campbell and Eleanor Dickson was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1913 and was also a member of the American Philosophical Society the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the London Mathematical Society the French Academy of Sciences and the Union of Czech Mathematicians and Physicists Dickson was the first recipient of a prize created in 1924 by The American Association for the Advancement of Science for his work on the arithmetics of algebras Harvard 1936 and Princeton 1941 awarded him honorary doctorates Dickson presided over the American Mathematical Society in 1917 1918 His December 1918 presidential address titled Mathematics in War Perspective criticized American mathematics for falling short of those of Britain France and Germany Let it not again become possible that thousands of young men shall be so seriously handicapped in their Army and Navy work by lack of adequate preparation in mathematics In 1928 he was also the first recipient of the Cole Prize for algebra awarded annually by the AMS for his book Algebren und ihre Zahlentheorie It appears that Dickson was a hard man A hard bitten character Dickson tended to speak his mind bluntly he was always sparing in his praise for the work of others he indulged his serious passions for bridge and billiards and reportedly did not like to lose at either game 2 He delivered terse and unpolished lectures and spoke sternly to his students Given Dickson s intolerance for student weaknesses in mathematics however his comments could be harsh even though not intended to be personal He did not aim to make students feel good about themselves 3 Dickson had a sudden death trial for his prospective doctoral students he assigned a preliminary problem which was shorter than a dissertation problem and if the student could solve it in three months Dickson would agree to oversee the graduate student s work If not the student had to look elsewhere for an advisor 3 Work editDickson had a major impact on American mathematics especially abstract algebra His mathematical output consists of 18 books and more than 250 papers The Collected Mathematical Papers of Leonard Eugene Dickson fill six large volumes The algebraist editIn 1901 Dickson published his first book Linear groups with an exposition of the Galois field theory a revision and expansion of his Ph D thesis Teubner in Leipzig published the book as there was no well established American scientific publisher at the time Dickson had already published 43 research papers in the preceding five years all but seven on finite linear groups Parshall 1991 described the book as follows Dickson presented a unified complete and general theory of the classical linear groups not merely over the prime field GF p as Jordan had done but over the general finite field GF pn and he did this against the backdrop of a well developed theory of these underlying fields his book represented the first systematic treatment of finite fields in the mathematical literature An appendix in this book lists the non abelian simple groups then known having order less than 1 billion He listed 53 of the 56 having order less than 1 million The remaining three were found in 1960 1965 and 1967 Dickson worked on finite fields and extended the theory of linear associative algebras initiated by Joseph Wedderburn and Cartan He started the study of modular invariants of a group In 1905 Wedderburn then at Chicago on a Carnegie Fellowship published a paper that included three claimed proofs of a theorem stating that all finite division algebras were commutative now known as Wedderburn s theorem The proofs all made clever use of the interplay between the additive group of a finite division algebra A and the multiplicative group A A 0 Karen Parshall noted that the first of these three proofs had a gap not noticed at the time Dickson also found a proof of this result but believing Wedderburn s first proof to be correct Dickson acknowledged Wedderburn s priority But Dickson also noted that Wedderburn constructed his second and third proofs only after having seen Dickson s proof She concluded that Dickson should be credited with the first correct proof 4 Dickson s search for a counterexample to Wedderburn s theorem led him to investigate nonassociative algebras and in a series of papers he found all possible three and four dimensional nonassociative division algebras over a field In 1919 Dickson constructed Cayley numbers by a doubling process starting with quaternions H displaystyle mathbb H nbsp 5 His method was extended to a doubling of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp to produce C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp and of C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp to produce H displaystyle mathbb H nbsp by A A Albert in 1922 and the procedure is known now as the Cayley Dickson construction of composition algebras The number theorist editDickson proved many interesting results in number theory using results of Vinogradov to deduce the ideal Waring theorem in his investigations of additive number theory He proved the Waring s problem for k 7 displaystyle k geq 7 nbsp under the further condition of 3k 1 2k 1 1 5k 1 displaystyle 3 k 1 2 k 1 leq 1 5 k 1 nbsp independently of Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai who proved it for k 6 displaystyle k geq 6 nbsp ahead of him 6 The three volume History of the Theory of Numbers 1919 23 is still much consulted today covering divisibility and primality Diophantine analysis and quadratic and higher forms The work contains little interpretation and makes no attempt to contextualize the results being described yet it contains essentially every significant number theoretic idea from the dawn of mathematics up to the 1920s except for quadratic reciprocity and higher reciprocity laws A planned fourth volume on these topics was never written A A Albert remarked that this three volume work would be a life s work by itself for a more ordinary man Bibliography editDickson Leonard Eugene 1958 1901 Magnus Wilhelm ed Linear groups With an exposition of the Galois field theory Dover Phoenix editions New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 49548 4 MR 0104735 7 8 online hathitrust B G Teubner s Sammlung von lehrbuchern auf dem gebiete der mathematischen wissenschaften mit einschluss ihrer anwendungen Bd VI B G Teubner 1901 Dickson Leonard Eugene 1903 1903 Introduction to the theory of algebraic equations New York John Wiley amp Sons 9 online hathitrust J Wiley amp Sons 1903 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2010 1914 Linear algebras Reprinting of Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics No 16 Naub press ISBN 978 1 178 36805 5 MR 0118745 10 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2010 1914 Algebraic invariants Cornell University Library ISBN 978 1 4297 0042 9 11 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2004 1914 On invariants and the theory of numbers Dover Phoenix editions New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 43828 3 MR 0201389 12 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2009 1914 Elementary theory of equations Cornell University Library ISBN 978 1 112 27988 1 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2005 1919 History of the theory of numbers Vol I Divisibility and primality New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 44232 7 MR 0245499 13 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2005 1920 History of the theory of numbers Vol II Diophantine analysis New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 44233 4 MR 0245500 14 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2005 1923 History of the theory of numbers Vol III Quadratic and higher forms New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 44234 1 MR 0245501 Dickson Leonard Eugene 2009 1922 First course in the theory of equations University of Michigan Library Dickson Leonard Eugene 1960 1923 Algebras and their arithmetics New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 60616 3 MR 0111764 15 1926 Modern algebraic theories 16 1923 1928 Algebraic Numbers Report with others for U S National Research Council 1929 Introduction to the Theory of Numbers 17 1930 Studies in the Theory of Numbers 18 1935 with G A Bliss Biographical Memoir of Eliakim Hastings Moore 1862 1932 1935 Researches on Waring s problem 1938 with Hans Frederick Blichfeldt and George Abram Miller Theory and Applications of Finite Groups 1938 Algebras And Their Arithmetics 1st edn in 1923 1939 Modern Elementary Theory of Numbers 1939 New First Course in the Theory of Equations Plane Trigonometry With Practical Applications Dickson Leonard Eugene 1975 Albert A Adrian ed The collected mathematical papers of Leonard Eugene Dickson vol I VI New York AMS Chelsea Publishing ISBN 978 0 8284 0273 6 MR 0749229 MR0441665Notes edit A A Albert 1955 Leonard Eugene Dickson 1874 1954 from National Academy of Sciences Karen Parshall 1999 Leonard Eugene Dickson in American National Biography volume 6 Oxford University Press pp 578 79 a b Fenster D D 1997 Role modeling in mathematics the case of Leonard Eugene Dickson 1874 1954 Historia Mathematica 24 7 24 doi 10 1006 hmat 1997 2120 Parshall Karen 1983 In pursuit of the finite division algebra theorem and beyond Joseph H M Wedderburn Leonard Dickson and Oswald Veblen Archives of International History of Science 33 274 99 Dickson L E 1919 On Quaternions and Their Generalization and the History of the Eight Square Theorem Annals of Mathematics 2nd 20 3 155 171 doi 10 2307 1967865 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 1967865 Number Theory Universities Press 2003 pp 95 ISBN 978 81 7371 454 2 Retrieved July 15 2013 Miller G A 1902 Review Linear Groups with an Exposition of the Galois Field Theory by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 9 2 165 172 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1902 00970 1 Karen Parshall 1991 A study in group theory Leonard Eugene Dickson s Linear groups Mathematical Intelligencer 13 7 11 Miller G A 1904 Review Introduction to the Theory of Algebraic Equations by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 10 8 411 412 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1904 01143 x Graustein William Caspar 1915 Review Linear Algebra by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 21 10 511 522 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1915 02690 x Carmichael R D 1916 Review Algebraic Invariants by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 22 4 197 199 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1916 02758 3 Glenn Oliver Edmunds 1915 Review Part I On Invariants and the Theory of Numbers by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 21 9 464 470 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1915 02689 3 Lehmer D N 1919 Review History of the Theory of Numbers by L E Dickson Volume I PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 26 3 125 132 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1919 03280 7 Vandiver H S 1924 Review History of the Theory of Numbers by L E Dickson Volume II Diophantine Analysis Volume III Quadratic and Higher Forms with a chapter on the class number by George Hoffman Cresse PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 30 1 65 70 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1924 03852 X Hazlett O C 1924 Review Algebras and their Arithmetics by L E Dickson and Corpi Numerici e Algebre by Gaetano Scorza PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 30 5 263 270 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1924 03899 3 Bell E T 1926 Review Modern Algebraic Theories by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 32 6 707 710 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1926 04303 2 Bell E T 1930 Review Introduction to the Theory of Numbers by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 36 7 455 459 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1930 04968 x Uspensky J V 1932 Review Studies in the Theory of Numbers by L E Dickson PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 38 7 463 465 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1932 05419 2 External links editLeonard Eugene Dickson at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Leonard Eugene Dickson MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Leonard Eugene Dickson at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Works by Leonard Eugene Dickson at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Leonard Eugene Dickson at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leonard Eugene Dickson amp oldid 1216200533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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