Bonjour à toutes et tous,

Veuillez trouver ci-dessous l’annonce d’une journée d’étude qui aura lieu le 
vendredi 22 novembre 2019, à l’Université de Nantes, sur le campus Tertre.
Cette journée est co-organisée par le CAPHI, le Laboratoire de mathématiques 
Jean Leray, le Centre François Viète et la MSH Ange Guépin, dans le cadre d’une 
série de rencontres interdisciplinaires sur le thème « Espaces empiriques, 
espaces conceptuels. Approches croisées : philosophie et mathématiques ».

Bien à vous, 

Ivahn Smadja pour l’ensemble des organisateurs

-----------------------------------------------
Vendredi 22 novembre 2019
Université de Nantes, Faculté des lettres et sciences humaines, IGARUN, salle 
991-992, 9h-17h.
Vincenzo De Risi, CNRS, SPHère, Paris — Max Planck, Berlin

"Drawing Lines through Rivers and Cities. The Axiomatization of Space in the 
Early Modern Age"

Abstract : "The talk explores the history of the foundations of geometry from 
the times of Euclid to the 19th century. In particular, we will consider the 
evolution of the notion of an axiom from antiquity to the modern age, and the 
parallel transformation of geometry from a science of figures (as it was in 
Euclid) into a science of space (as it is considered in the 19th century). We 
will see how the latter important transformation of the object of geometry 
reflected on the consideration of the axiomatic method in general, and this 
eventually produced the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry and non-Euclidean 
space in the works of Bolyai, Lobachevsky and Gauss."

José Ferreirós Dominguez, Universidad de Sevilla.

"What is (was) the problem of space? « 

Abstract : "The talk will discuss the rather extreme changes in what has been 
called 'the space problem', paying particular attention to discussions in the 
18th century, the mid-19th century, and the early 20th century. Such changes 
are indicative of the general evolution of the discipline mathematics, of the 
shifts in its consideration as a field of inquiry and the changing contexts in 
which it has been developed and understood."

Michael Friedman, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin

 "On visualizations and non-visualizations of branch points and curves"

Abstract: "How can one imagine the “bending” of algebraic, complex, projective 
curves or surfaces? The talk will aim to describe the different ways branch 
points and branch curves were visualised at the turn of the 19th century. On 
the one hand, for branch points of complex curves one finds an abundance of 
visualisation techniques employed: Riemann, Neumann, Klein and von Dyck all 
promoted numerous forms of visualisation, either in form of two-dimensional 
illustrations or three-dimensional material models. On the other hand, For 
branch (and ramification) curves of complex surfaces, there were hardly any 
visual representations: When the Italian school of algebraic geometry studied 
branch curves systematically, at the beginning of the century, only partial 
illustrations can be seen (if at all), and branch curves were generally made a 
tool rather than an object to be researched and visualised."

 

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