A History of Vector Analysis: The Evolution of the Idea of a Vectorial System

A History of Vector Analysis: The Evolution of the Idea of a Vectorial System

by Michael J. Crowe

Vector Analysis
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Added on March 20, 2026

Description

On October 16, 1843, Sir William Rowan Hamilton discovered quaternions and, on the very same day, presented his breakthrough to the Royal Irish Academy. Meanwhile, in a less dramatic style, a German high school teacher, Hermann Grassmann, was developing another vectorial system involving hypercomplex numbers comparable to quaternions. The creations of these two mathematicians led to other vectorial systems, most notably the system of vector analysis formulated by Josiah Willard Gibbs and Oliver Heaviside and now almost universally employed in mathematics, physics and engineering. Yet the Gibbs-Heaviside system won acceptance only after decades of debate and controversy in the latter half of the nineteenth century concerning which of the competing systems offered the greatest advantages for mathematical pedagogy and practice.This volume, the first large-scale study of the development of vectorial systems, traces he rise of the vector concept from the discovery of complex numbers through the systems of hypercomplex numbers created by Hamilton and Grassmann to the final acceptance around 1910 of the modern system of vector analysis. Professor Michael J. Crowe (University of Notre Dame) discusses each major vectorial system as well as the motivations that led to their creation, development, and acceptance or rejection.The vectorial approach revolutionized mathematical methods and teaching in algebra, geometry, and physical science. As Professor Crowe explains, in these areas traditional Cartesian methods were replaced by vectorial approaches. He also presents the history of ideas of vector addition, subtraction, multiplication, division (in those systems where it occurs) and differentiation. His book also contains refreshing portraits of the personalities involved in the competition among the various systems.Teachers, students, and practitioners of mathematics, physics, and engineering as well as anyone interested in the history of scientific ideas will find this volume to be well written, solidly argued, and excellently documented. Reviewers have described it a s "a fascinating volume," "an engaging and penetrating historical study" and "an outstanding book (that) will doubtless long remain the standard work on the subject." In 1992 it won an award for excellence from the Jean Scott Foundation of France.

Reader Reviews

★★★★Manny

[Before reading]I'll bet dollars to dimes that Pynchon used this as background when researching Against the Day. Check out the Wikipedia article if you're skeptical.Unable to resist... just ordered._____________________[After reading]Crowe's book did not disappoint, and I recommend it both to Pynchonheads and to people interested in finding out how modern mathematics got to be the way it is. If you fall into both categories, you are insane if you don't go and order a copy now.Regarding Against t

★★★★★Arthur Pesah

Wonderful trip into the universe of 19th century mathematicians, written in a very clear prose and coherent narrative!You learn how Hamilton, Grassman, Tait, Gibbs, Heaviside, and many others have defined the terms and concepts that are now fundamental tools in physics and mathematics: vectors, linear functions, curl, divergence, scalar and cross products, etc. You observe the evolution in the philosophy of mathematics that occurred during this century (from intuition to abstraction) and the lon

★★★★★Shashvat Shukla

Well structured book. Very reflective on how history of maths should be done.The book captures the nuanced genealogy of the concept of vectors, giving credit widely where it is due. It captures the spirit of the times in many excerpts of published materials and correspondence - and also captures the spirit by showing many lines of development that happened in parallel. The concept of a vector was a hard one for mathematicians to accept. The need to describe Electricity and Magnetism made it abso

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Mar 20, 2026First seenFREE