Charles Babbage

And the Engines of Perfection

Kids, People and Places, Biography, Non-Fiction, Science and Technology, Technology, Computers
Cover of the book Charles Babbage by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan, Oxford University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan ISBN: 9780190282356
Publisher: Oxford University Press Publication: January 7, 1999
Imprint: Oxford University Press Language: English
Author: Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
ISBN: 9780190282356
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication: January 7, 1999
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Language: English
Charles Babbage, "the grandfather of the modern computer," did not live to see even one of his calculating machines at work. A dazzling genius with vision extending far beyond the limitations of the Victorian age, Babbage successfully calculated a table of logarithms during his years at Cambridge University, allowing mathematical calculations to be executed with extreme precision. Only the possibility of human error prevented complete accuracy, and Babbage understood that the only way to attain perfection is to leave the human mind entirely out of the equation. He devoted most of his life and spent most of his private fortune and government stipend trying to improve his difference engines and analytical engines. Bruce Collier and James MacLachlan chronicle Babbage's education and scientific career, his remarkably active social life and long string of personal tragedies, his forays into philosophy and economics, his successes and failures, and the biggest disappointment of his life-- his ingenious inventions were centuries ahead of the primitive capabilities of Victorian technology.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Charles Babbage, "the grandfather of the modern computer," did not live to see even one of his calculating machines at work. A dazzling genius with vision extending far beyond the limitations of the Victorian age, Babbage successfully calculated a table of logarithms during his years at Cambridge University, allowing mathematical calculations to be executed with extreme precision. Only the possibility of human error prevented complete accuracy, and Babbage understood that the only way to attain perfection is to leave the human mind entirely out of the equation. He devoted most of his life and spent most of his private fortune and government stipend trying to improve his difference engines and analytical engines. Bruce Collier and James MacLachlan chronicle Babbage's education and scientific career, his remarkably active social life and long string of personal tragedies, his forays into philosophy and economics, his successes and failures, and the biggest disappointment of his life-- his ingenious inventions were centuries ahead of the primitive capabilities of Victorian technology.

More books from Oxford University Press

Cover of the book Reluctant Witnesses by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Core Knowledge and Conceptual Change by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book The Wealth of a Nation by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Tonality and Transformation by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Reckonings by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Return to Armageddon by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book A Superpower Transformed by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Mixing and Mastering in the Box by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Hindu Christian Faqir by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Computational Propaganda by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Slow Fade to Black by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Spirits of Place in American Literary Culture by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Could it be Adult ADHD? by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book The People Themselves by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
Cover of the book Learning Technology by Bruce Collier, James MacLachlan
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy