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The Mathematical Gazette, 1996
Over 60 years ago an article with the above heading appeared in the Mathematical Gazette , shortly after the celebration in 1932 of the centenary of the birth of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known and admired universally as the author of the Alice ...
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Over 60 years ago an article with the above heading appeared in the Mathematical Gazette , shortly after the celebration in 1932 of the centenary of the birth of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known and admired universally as the author of the Alice ...
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The Mathematical Gazette, 1933
As this is the last paper of our meeting, you may be expecting me to provide a bright and witty epilogue to conclude the proceedings. Further, since Lewis Carroll is recognised as a humorist, who did not hesitate to include pantomime humour in his mathematical essays, you may be expecting a kind of harlequinade. But, unfortunately,
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As this is the last paper of our meeting, you may be expecting me to provide a bright and witty epilogue to conclude the proceedings. Further, since Lewis Carroll is recognised as a humorist, who did not hesitate to include pantomime humour in his mathematical essays, you may be expecting a kind of harlequinade. But, unfortunately,
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History and Philosophy of Logic, 2005
Charles L. Dodgson's reputation as a significant figure in nineteenth-century logic was firmly established when the philosopher and historian of philosophy William Warren Bartley, III published Dodgson's ‘lost’ book of logic, Part II of Symbolic Logic, in 1977.
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Charles L. Dodgson's reputation as a significant figure in nineteenth-century logic was firmly established when the philosopher and historian of philosophy William Warren Bartley, III published Dodgson's ‘lost’ book of logic, Part II of Symbolic Logic, in 1977.
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