Difference between revisions of "Arthur Cayley"

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(Created page with "Arthur Cayley is a prominent British mathematician that has been credited for inventing matrix algebra.")
 
 
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[[wikipedia:Arthur Cayley|Arthur Cayley]] is a prominent British mathematician that has been credited for inventing matrix algebra.
{{WikiEntry|key=Arthur Cayley|qCode=159430}}, a British mathematician that is a contemporary of Irish mathematician [[William Hamilton]]. Cayley has been credited for inventing matrix algebra.
 
Both Cayley and Hamilton had been inspired by [[wikipedia:Luca Pacioli|Luca Pacioli]]'s [[Double Entry Bookkeeping]], where Cayley wrote a short pamphlet, named: [[Book/The Principles of Book-Keeping by Double Entry|The Principles of Book-keeping by Double Entry]]<ref>{{:Book/The Principles of Book-Keeping by Double Entry}}</ref>, and showed that balancing and keeping data consistent and honest being a mathematically interesting idea.
 
Fitzgerald's paper<ref>{{:Paper/Quantum Information and Accounting Information: A Revolutionary Trend and the World of Topology}}</ref> on [[Paper/Quantum Information and Accounting Information: A Revolutionary Trend and the World of Topology|Quantum Information and Accounting Information: A Revolutionary Trend and the World of Topology]] explicitly referred to Cayley's interest in double entry bookkeeping and its connection to matrix algebra.
 
<noinclude>
=References=
 
=Related Pages=
[[Category:Linear Algebra]]
[[Category:Double Entry Bookkeeping]]
</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 07:12, 24 February 2022

Arthur Cayley(Q159430), a British mathematician that is a contemporary of Irish mathematician William Hamilton. Cayley has been credited for inventing matrix algebra.

Both Cayley and Hamilton had been inspired by Luca Pacioli's Double Entry Bookkeeping, where Cayley wrote a short pamphlet, named: The Principles of Book-keeping by Double Entry[1], and showed that balancing and keeping data consistent and honest being a mathematically interesting idea.

Fitzgerald's paper[2] on Quantum Information and Accounting Information: A Revolutionary Trend and the World of Topology explicitly referred to Cayley's interest in double entry bookkeeping and its connection to matrix algebra.


References

Related Pages

  1. Cayley, Arthur (1894). The Principles of Book-Keeping by Double Entry. local page: Cambridge at the University Press. 
  2. Demski, Joel; Fitzgerald, S.; Ijiri, Yuji; Ijiri, Yumi; Lin, Haijin (August 2006). "Quantum Information and Accounting Information: A Revolutionary Trend and the World of Topology" (PDF). local page.