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Leibniz et les raisonnements sur la vie humaine
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Analyse Des Infiniment Petits, Pour l'intelligence des lignes courbes
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An institution of fluxions
containing the first principles, the operations, with some of the uses and applications of that admirable method; according to the scheme perfix'd [sic] to his tract of Quadratures, by (its first inventor) the incomparable Sir Isaac Newton -
Differentialrechnung
unter Berücksichtigung der physikalisch-technischen Anwendungen mit zahlreichen Beispielen und Aufgaben -
Innerer und äusserer Differentialkalkül
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Methodus differentialis
sive tractatus de summatione et interpolatione serierum infinitarum. Auctore Jacobo Stirling, R.S.S -
A treatise of fluxions
By Israel Lyons, Junior -
An institution of fluxions
containing the first principles, the operations, with some of the uses and applications of that admirable method; according to the scheme perfix'd [sic] to his tract of Quadratures, by (its first inventor) the incomparable Sir Isaac Newton. By Humphry Ditton -
Letters concerning mind
To which is added, a sketch of universal arithmetic; comprehending the differential calculus, and the doctrine of fluxions. By the late Reverend Mr. John Petvin, A. M. Vicar of Ilsington in Devon -
The method of fluxions both direct and inverse
The former being a translation from the celebrated Marquis de L'Hospital's Analyse des infinements [sic] petits: and the latter supply'd by the translator, E. Stone, F.R.S -
The doctrine of ultimators
Containing a new acquisition to mathematical literature, naturally resulting from the consideration of an equation, as reducible from its variable to its ultimate state: Or, a Discovery Of the true and genuine Foundation of what has hitherto mistakenly prevailed under the improper Names of Fluxions and the Differential Calculus. By Means of which We now have that Apex of all Mathematical Science entirely rescued from the blind and ungeometrical Method of Deduction, which it has hitherto laboured under; and made to depend upon Principles as strictly demonstrable, as the most self-evident Proposition in the first Elements of Geometry. By the Reverend Mr. John Kirkby, Vicar of Waldershare in Kent