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A rather pretty little book, written in the form of a text but more likely to be read simply for pleasure, in which the author (Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at the U. of Kansas) explores the analog of the theory of functions of a complex variable which comes into being when the complexes are re
Mister Magnificent is new to Longfellow Elementary and isn't sure what to expect. Being his fifth school that he's attended, he just wants a smooth ride. It doesn't take long for Mister to encounter the school bully, James. James does everything in his power to try and scare Mister. Not bothered by James' attempts, Mister devises a plan on how to get James to stop being a bully. With an imagination out of this world, Mister tries to find ways that he can overcome the school bully without having to get physical. Will Mister Magnificent conquerthe bully through peace? Take the ride with Mister as he tries to win the school bully over by being himself: Magnificent.
This book, first published by Cambridge University Press in 1955, investigates the origins of The Equatorie of the Planetis, a fourteenth-century manuscript in the library of Peterhouse, Cambridge. Dr Price, a historian of science, examines the idea that it was composed and written by Geoffrey Chaucer.
Explores the analog of the theory of functions of a complex variable.
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