Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)

Pierre de Fermat (French pronunciation: [pjɛ ː ʁ dəfɛʁma], August 17, 1601, or 1607 /8 to 12 January 1665) was a French lawyer Parliament in Toulouse, France, and an amateur mathematician, which is a tribute to the early developments that have led to the calculus, according to including his adequality. In particular, he has been recognized for his discovery of the original method of finding the maximum and minimum coordinates of curved lines, which is similar to when an unknown Differential Calculus, and his research in number theory. He accounted for a significant analytic geometry, probability, and optics. He is best known as Fermat's Last Theorem, which he described the margin of a copy of the memorandum of Diophantus' Arithmetic.

Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus) 
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus) 
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)
Pierre de Fermat - French Mathematician (Differential Calculus)

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