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Charles Babbage: and the engines of perfection

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 atCambridge Unive...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Collier, Bruce, MacLachlan, James, Gingerich, Owen
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Oxford University Press 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2698086
Descripción
Sumario: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 atCambridge 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 ofhis 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 ingeniousinventions were centuries ahead of the primitive capabilities of Victorian technology.