Difference between revisions of "Arthur Cayley"
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{{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
- ↑ Cayley, Arthur (1894). The Principles of Book-Keeping by Double Entry. local page: Cambridge at the University Press.
- ↑ 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.