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  1. De Morgan Sophia 1 - MacTutor History of Mathematics. De Morgan by his wife Sophia. Part 1. This file covers events in De Morgan's life from 1806 to 1826. The material is a version of that written by De Morgan's wife Sophia Elizabeth in 'S E De Morgan, Memoir of Augustus De Morgan by his wife Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan ( London, 1882) '.

  2. De Morgan, Sophia Elizabeth; De Morgan, Augustus (1882). Memoir of Augustus De Morgan: With Selections from His Letters. Longmans, Green, and Company. ISBN 978-1-108-01447-2. So you called me an atheist vagabond, fancying that Voltaire was an atheist : he was, in fact, theistic to bigotry, and anti-revolutionist to the same extent.

  3. Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan (1809-1892) was the wife of the mathematician and logician Augustus De Morgan and mother of the celebrated ceramicist William De Morgan. In this book, published in 1863, De Morgan, writing as 'CD' - with a preface by her husband signed as 'AB' - acknowledges that alleged spirit manifestations have faced much criticism and scepticism, but argues that it was a little ...

  4. -The Boole-De Morgan Correspondence, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1982 . Bibliografía secundaria-Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan, Memoir of Augustus De Morgan by his wife Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan, Longmans, Greens, Londres, 1882.-J. Loewenberg, Review of Essays on the Life and Work of Newton. AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN.

  5. 18 de ago. de 2016 · Memoir of Augustus De Morgan. By his wife, Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan. London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1882. - Volume 25 Issue 2

  6. Threescore years and ten : reminiscences of the late Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan : to which are added letters to and from her husband, the late Augustus De Morgan, and others by De Morgan, Sophia Elizabeth, 1809-1892; De Morgan, Mary A

  7. De Morgan married Sophia Elizabeth Frend (1809-1892) on 3 August 1837. De Morgan had met Sophia ten years earlier through his friendship with her father William Frend who worked at the Nautical Almanac. Frend had published Principles of Algebra (1796) with an appendix by Francis Maseres; Frend rejected the use of negative quantities.