Page:A Source Book in Mathematics.djvu/11

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SOURCE BOOKS IN THE HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES


General Editor’s Preface

This series of Source Books aims to present-the most significant passages from the works of the most important contributors to the major sciences during the last three or four centuries. So much material has accumulated that a demand for selected sources has arisen in several fields. Source books in philosophy have been in use for nearly a quarter of a century, and history, economics, ethics, and sociology utilize carefully selected source material. Recently, too, such works have appeared in the fields of psychology and eugenics. It is the purpose of this series, therefore, to deal in a similar way with the leading physical and biological sciences.

The general plan is for each volume to present a treatment of a particular science with as much finality of scholarship as possible from the Renaissance to the end of the nineteenth century. In all, it is expected that the series will consist of eight or ten volumes, which will appear as rapidly as may be consistent with sound scholarship.

In June, 1924, the General Editor began to organize the following Advisory Board:

  • Harold C. Brown
  • Morris R. Cohen
  • Arthur O. Lovejoy
  • George H. Mead
  • William P. Montague
  • Wilmon H. Sheldon
  • Edward G. Spaulding
  • Joseph S. Ames[1]
  • Frederick Barry
  • R. T. Chamberlin[1]
  • Edwin G. Conklin
  • Harlow Shapley
  • David Eugene Smith
  • Alfred M. Tozzer
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Geology
  • Zoology
  • Astronomy
  • Mathematics
  • Anthropology
  • Stanford University
  • College of the City of N.Y.
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • University of Chicago
  • Columbia University
  • Yale University
  • Princeton University
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Columbia University
  • University of Chicago
  • Princeton University
  • Harvard University
  • Columbia University
  • Harvard University




  1. 1.0 1.1 No longer chairman of a committee, because of the pressure of other duties, but remains on the Board in an advisory capacity.

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