416 résultats
19932091202133209046Otsukishoten 1993. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Otsukishoten paperback
19802083002116411730Otsukishoten 1980. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Otsukishoten paperback
1952008334Providence Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society 1952. Complete 2 volume set. Very Good condition. Each volume is clean square and reasonably tight; bound in the original maroon cloth with gilt lettering on the spine and front cover. Inner hinges are perfectly sound. Pages are clean and unmarked. Volume I includes Professor Harald Bohr's address announcing the award of the Fields Medal to Professors Atle Selberg and Laurent Schwartz. The preface to Volume II notes that the central theme for the Conference in Algebra was the Theory of Rings. Vol. 1 contains: Officers and Members; Report of the Secretary; Stated Addresses; Addresses and Communications in Sections Lawrence M. Graves; & Paul A. Smith; Einar Hille; Oscar Zariski editorial committee. Vol 2: Conference in Algebra; Conference in Analysis; Conference in Applied Mathematics; Conference in Topology A. A. Albert; Richard Brauer; Nathan Jacobson; Saunders MacLane; Oscar Zariski committee. Index of Authors in each vol. This set was among several dozen books from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Church and Mrs. Church are included in the List of Members printed in Volume I. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good condition/No jackets. 2 vols.: viii 769pp. iv 461pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. American Mathematical Society Hardcover
19892090502113712066Not Available 1989. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19732090502113705793Not Available 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19652091202133001747Chiku ma shobo 1965. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Chiku ma shobo paperback
19662091202133001933Kawade Shobo Shinsha 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Kawade Shobo Shinsha paperback
1989100136468Blackwell Publishers 1989 300 pages 14 986x2 032x22 86cm. 1989. Broché. 300 pages.
1974PHIL1518Warsaw, PWN-Polish scientific Publ. (1974). gr.-8°, XV, 460 S., OLn. m. RüTit., an den Kanten leicht berieb., zahlr. Bleistiftanmerk. u. Unterstreich. im Text. (= Synthese Library Vol. 62). In Englisch.
1999100132818Cambridge University Press 1999 352 pages 15 95x2 34x23 6cm. 1999. Cartonné jaquette. 352 pages.
1991100124477BRISTOL CLASSICAL PR 1991 178 pages 15 8x1 6x23 8cm. 1991. Relié. 178 pages.
1951F119073St. Bonaventure, The Franciscan Institute 1951-1954 2 volumes, xiv + 461pp. (continuous pagination), 23cm., in the series "Franciscan Institute Publications. Text series" nos.2 & 4, softcovers, small label at lower end of spine, text is clean and bright, good condition, [Introduction in English, text edition in Latin], F119073
1999x-0521635497Cambridge Univ Pr 1999. Paperback. New. 436 pages. 8.75x6.25x1.00 inches. Cambridge Univ Pr paperback
1963005923Djursholm Sweden: Institute Mittag-Leffler 1963. Near Fine condition. SEE PHOTOS. Bright clean square and tight. Hinges are perfect. Bound in the original blue cloth with gilt lettering on the front cover and on the spine over a handsome brown panel. Gilt lettering is still bright and shiny. Pages are clean and unmarked. No underlining. No highlighting. No margin notes. Includes LOGIC ARITHMETIC AND AUTOMATA by Alonzo Church along with a large number of other papers most in English but with some in French German or Russian. Bibliographical references. Index. From the preface: "This volume contains the official record of the International Congress of Mathematicians held in Stockholm from 15 to 22 August 1962 and the text of the addresses given by invitation of the Organizing Committee." This is one of several dozen books from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine condition/No dust jacket. Illus. by NOT a library discard. 8vo. L 597pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Institute Mittag-Leffler Hardcover
1948009130Oslo Norway: Skrivemaskinstua 1948. Very Good condition. 20.5 cm x 28.5 cm. Staple-bound light blue stiff-paper wrappers mildly faded. Spine covered with dark blue paper that is chipped at the ends. Mimeographed typescript. Pages are printed on one-side rectos only. NO owner's name or bookplate. Pages are bright white clean and unmarked. Text in Norwegian or so I'm guessing. Laid-in are 2 sheets of printed corrections Rettelser til. This is quite possibly the very copy used for the review published in Alonzo Church's JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC 14 1949 185-186. It is one of several dozen books and periodicals from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis the Church-Turing Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. Church was first to demonstrate that David Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem was unsolvable. It was Church who coined the phrase "Turing machine" for Alan Turing's hypothetical universal computing machine. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. 2. utgave. Oversize Softcover. Very Good condition. iv 192 sheets sides. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Skrivemaskinstua Paperback
1995F67920Turnhout, Brepols 1995 cxviii + 193pp. + 16 plates out-of-text, 25cm., in the series "Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis" volume CXX (120), publisher's hardcover binding in orange cloth with gilt lettering, ISBN 2-503-04201-5, (introduction in Italian, text in Latin), very good condition, F67920
1983009113Louvain Belgium: Central National Belge de Recherches de Logique / Nauwelaerts Printing 1983. Very Good condition. 16 cm x 24 cm. A solid copy -- square and tight. Bound in the original paper wrappers with minor crease to one corner of the front cover. NO owner's name or bookplate. Pages are clean and unmarked. NO underlining. NO highlighting. NO margin notes. This issue contains 7 papers -- 1 in French 1 in German and 5 in English including: ON AN APPLICATION OF TRUTH-FUNCTIONS TO THE LOGIC OF PREDICATES by Alfons Grieder. This is one of several dozen books and periodicals from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis the Church-Turing Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. Church was first to demonstrate that David Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem was unsolvable. It was Church who coined the phrase "Turing machine" for Alan Turing's hypothetical universal computing machine. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. First Edition première édition. Softcover. Very Good condition. 119pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Central National Belge de Recherches de Logique / Nauwelaerts Printing Paperback
1988009096Wroclaw Poland: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego 1988. Very Good condition. 17 cm x 23.5 cm. Bound in the original brown pictorial wrappers. NO owner's name or bookplate. Pages are clean. NO underlining. NO highlighting. NO margin notes. Sketches from the History of German Philosophy. Text in Polish with brief summaries in German. Footnotes. Bibliographical references. ACTA Universitatis Wratislaviensis No. 835. Prace Filozoficzne L. Historia Filozofii 6. This is one of several dozen books and periodicals from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. . First Edition. Softcover. Very Good condition. 114pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego Paperback
1957023568Lund / Copenhagen: CWK Gleerup / Ejnar Munksgaard 1957. INSCRIBED by the AUTHOR: "with the writer's compliments" but unsigned. From the library of Prof. Alonzo Church. Very Good condition. NOT a library discard. No. 2 in the Library of Theoria series edited by Ake Petzall. A pioneer work in the logic of preference. From: The Philosophy of Sören Halldén edited by K. Segerberg and N-E Sahlin: "The contraposition principle -- In On the Logic of Better Sören Halldén defends a principle that says that the better the presence of something is the worse is its absence.5 If coffee is better than tea then not-tea is better than not-coffee. Or to take a more extreme example if not-cancer is better than not-flu then flu is better than cancer which on the surface sounds quite reasonable. Halldéns argument in favour of this principle runs as follows: Making a value comparison generally means not comparing A to B but rather comparing A without B to B without A. To say that it is better to be a philosopher than to make money using Aristotles own examples is to say that to be a philosopher and not making money is better than to make money and not be a philosopher. Making money and being a philosopher is not considered a possibility." This volume was among several dozen books from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. This book doesn't have Alonzo Church's name anywhere but see our inventory for several other items that do. INSCRIBED by the AUTHOR. First Edition. Softcover. Very Good condition. Illus. by NOT a library discard. 112pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. CWK Gleerup / Ejnar Munksgaard Paperback
1973R100051146Seuil. 1973. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos plié, Intérieur acceptable. 349 pages - coins frottés - pliures sur les plats.. . . . Classification Dewey : 160-Logique
1979F111691Liège, s.d. [1979] x + 621pp., 30cm., Thèse présentée pour l'obtention du grade de Docteur en Philosophie à l'Université de l'Etat à Liège, br.orig., cachet au verso de la p.d.t., texte en typoscript et en bon état, poids: 2.5kg., F111691
1954008335Groningen / Amsterdam: Erven P. Noordhoff N.V. / North Holland Publishing Co. 1954. Complete 3 volume set. Very Good or better condition in Poor - Good dust jackets. Each volume is clean square and bound in the original maroon cloth stamped in gold on the spine and front cover. Inner hinges in volumes 2 and 3 are cracked but still holding. Only one of the plain paper Dust Jackets vol. I is Good; the other two are Poor separated at the spine with edge tears. All pages are clean and unmarked. Volumes II and III appeared in 1954 and 1956 respectively. Volume I was published last in 1957. This set was among several dozen books from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately these volumes do not have signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. . First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good condition/Poor - Good dust jackets. 3 vols.: 582pp. 440pp. 560pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Erven P. Noordhoff N.V. / North Holland Publishing Co. Hardcover
1936006367Princeton New Jersey: The Guild of Brackett Lecturers 1936. A remarkably well-preserved copy. Near Fine condition in a Fair glassine jacket. Sharp corners. Clean square and tight. This copy still has a plain glassine cellophane Dust Jacket presumably original. The jacket is heavily chipped along the spine but NOT separated. Bound in the original gray boards with a white label printed in red and black on the front cover. The upper board shows just a faint touch of darkening along part of the top edge where a chip in the jacket allowed access. No owner's name or bookplate. Pages are fresh crisp and unmarked. Subtitle: "An Address delivered before Princeton University on March 10 1936 in the Cyrus Fogg Brackett Lectureship in Applied Engineering and Technology." The author was President New Jersey Bell Telephone Company. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine condition/Fair glassine jacket. 8vo. 40pp. The Guild of Brackett Lecturers Hardcover
1961009128München: M. Weiss 1961. Very Good condition. 15 cm x 21 cm. A solid copy -- square and tight. Bound in the original cloth-backed paper wrappers. NO owner's name or bookplate. Pages are age-toned but clean and unmarked. Doctoral dissertation for Dr. Phil. from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in München. Text in German. Contains passages from the Frege Nachlass. This dissertation is discussed by Christian Thiel in his 1965 study SINNUND BEDEUTUNG IN DER LOGIK GOTTLOB FREGES. Printed errata slip has a few additional corrections handwritten in ink. This is one of several dozen books and periodicals from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis the Church-Turing Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. Church was first to demonstrate that David Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem was unsolvable. It was Church who coined the phrase "Turing machine" for Alan Turing's hypothetical universal computing machine. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. First Edition 1. Auflage. Softcover. Very Good condition. 93pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. M. Weiss Paperback
1951009131Hamburg Germany: Universität Hamburg 1951. Good condition. 21 cm x 30 cm. Bound in plain unprinted blue stiff card covers with a black spine. Edges of the cover are mildly faded with closed tears and a few tiny chips. Internal condition is FINE. NO owner's name or bookplate. Pages have text on one-side rectos only. This is probably a typescript carbon copy. Handwritten symbols and diagrams have been added to the text as well as a few ink corrections apparently by the author. Pages are otherwise clean and crisp. Gottlob Freges. Bertrand Russell. Subtitle: "Dissertation zur Erlangung des Doktorgrades der Philosophischen Fakultät der Universität Hamburg." Bierich's faculty advisors for this doctoral thesis were Prof. Dr. J. König and Prof. Dr. W. Flitner. On the front cover is a brief note: "Personal from author." This is one of several dozen books and periodicals from Alonzo Church's library that we were lucky enough to purchase at auction in New Jersey. Several of the books contain his signature or a presentation inscription to him. Unfortunately this copy does not have those signs of his ownership. But please check our inventory for several others that do. Alonzo Church 1903 - 1995 was professor of mathematics at Princeton University 1929-1967 and of mathematics and philosophy at UCLA 1967-1990. He was the founding editor of the JOURNAL OF SYMBOLIC LOGIC. Among his most influential contributions are Church's Theorem Church's Thesis the Church-Turing Thesis and the Lambda Calculus. His work was of major importance in mathematical logic recursion theory theoretical computer science and functional programming languages in general. Professor Church's creation of lambda calculus was the foundation for the LISP programming language and provided the semantic model for ALGOL. Church was first to demonstrate that David Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem was unsolvable. It was Church who coined the phrase "Turing machine" for Alan Turing's hypothetical universal computing machine. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Church is regarded by many as the greatest American logician of the 20th century. For more on Church's contributions see items 250 251 321 394 and 533 in Hook and Norman's ORIGINS OF CYBERSPACE A LIBRARY ON THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING. First Edition 1. Auflage. Stiff card covers Softcover. Good condition. vi 95pp. Great Packaging Fast Shipping. Universität Hamburg Paperback