George boole color

George Boole history

  • George Boole is born

    Boole was born in 1815 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England, the son of John Boole senior (1779–1848), a shoemaker[6] and Mary Ann Joyce.[7] He had a primary school education, and received lessons from his father, but due to a serious decline in business, he had little further formal and academic teaching
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    Life George Boole

    George Boole (/buːl/; 2 November 1815 – 8 December 1864) was a largely self-taught English mathematician, philosopher, and logician, most of whose short career was spent as the first professor of mathematics at Queen's College, Cork in Ireland. He worked in the fields of differential equations and algebraic logic, and is best known as the author of The Laws of Thought (1854) which contains Boolean algebra.
  • The Boole family grows

    George`s sister Mary Ann is born in1818 his brothers William in 1819 ang Charles in 1821
  • First learnings

    First learnings
    John Boole is passionately interested in science; he becomes George’s first teacher in mathematics and encourages his son’s academic progress. Father and son together apply mathematics to building cameras, microscopes and telescopes. George Boole goes to a commercial school for the sons of business people, the best schooling his family can afford. George's appetite for learning outpaces his teachers, and his father arranges extra tuition in Latin.
  • Young prodigy

    Young prodigy
    Having mastered Latin, George teaches himself classical Greek. Aged 14, he translates a Greek poem Ode to the Spring which is published locally. George presses on to teach himself French, German, and later Italian.
  • Mastering mathematics

    Mastering mathematics
    In 1831, Boole begins an ambitious programme of self-education in mathematics. He reads in French advanced mathematical texts by Lacroix, Lagrange, and Laplace. He studies and masters Sir Isaac Newton's great work Principia Mathematica.
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    Teaching and Self-Education

  • Supporting his family

    Supporting his family
    His father's struggling shoemaker's business collapses. Aged 16, George must provide for his family. Abandoning thoughts of a church career, he becomes an assistant teacher.
  • Mechanics' Institute

    Mechanics' Institute
    Boole becomes active in this Lincoln forerunner of an adult education institute. He is selected to be superintendent of classes and, for many years, provides free teaching in mathematics, science and the classics.
  • First public lecture

    First public lecture
    George delivers an address on the Genius and Discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton. The large audience is drawn from the Mechanics' Institute and leading citizens. Later this year, his lecture is printed and sold in Lincoln, and copies reach London.
  • Distinguished mentor

    Distinguished mentor
    Boole's studies are encouraged by the mathematician Sir Edward ffrench Bromhead FRS, first President of the Mechanics' Institute from 1833. Bromhead has a fine library at Thurlby Hall near Lincoln; he encourages Boole to borrow advanced mathematical texts and he comments on Boole's researches.
  • Achieving financial stability

    Achieving financial stability
    Boole recognises that, to secure the family finances, he must own his own school. He opens a 'Boarding School for Young Gentlemen' at Potter's Gate, Lincoln; his family assist with teaching and administration.
  • First publications

    First publications
    Boole publishes his first paper Researches on the Theory of Analytical Transformations in the Cambridge Mathematical Journal. Later this year, his paper Exposition of a General Theory of Linear Transformations initiates a new branch of mathematics, now called Invariant Theory. Boole contributes a total of 24 papers to the Cambridge Journal.
  • Royal Medal for Mathematics

    Royal Medal for Mathematics
    Boole's major paper On a General Method of Analysis is published in the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions. In his paper, Boole introduces his new 'algebra of classes'. Boole is awarded the Royal Society's Royal Medal for Mathematics for this paper.
  • Public Presentation

    Public Presentation
    Boole delivers his paper On the Equation of Laplace's Functions to the Annual Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Cambridge.
  • First book

    First book
    Boole's first book A Mathematical Analysis of Logic breaks new ground. He demonstrates that a mathematical approach can be applied to logic. He introduces 'symbolic logic' where mathematical symbols are used to represent classes or sets of objects, and the symbols are manipulated through mathematics.
  • Death of Boole's father

    Death of Boole's father
    Boole's problematic but remarkable father, born 1777, dies in December after a long illness.
  • Appointed Professor in Cork

    Appointed Professor in Cork
    With testimonials from leading mathematicians, Boole applies for a Professorshop..
    With testimonials from leading mathematicians, Boole applies for a Professorshop at one of the three new Queen's Colleges in Ireland in 1846. After a long delay, due partly to the Great Famine, he is appointed the first Professor of Mathematics at Queen's College Cork.
    Boole's appointment gives him a new sense of freedom and financial security.
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    The UCC years

  • Dean of Science

    Dean of Science
    Boole is elected Dean of the Science Division of the Faculty of Arts for 1851-2. A conscientious committee man, he is re-elected for a second term.
  • Masterworks

    Masterworks
    Boole publishes An Investigation of the Laws of Thought.
    This magnum opus extends his exploration of symbolic logic to probability theory, and originates a new concept, Mathematical Probability. The Laws of Thought builds upon and expands Boole's 1847 Analysis of Logic.
    In 1859, while continuing to explore probability, logic and operator theory He produces an excellent textbook A Treatise on Differential Equations; still in print, it remains useful for students today.
  • Marriage and Family with Mary Everest

    Marriage and Family with Mary Everest
    Mary is the nieceJohn Ryall, Vice-President and Professor of Greek at Queen's College Corkher paternal uncle Sir George Everest is Surveyor-General of India,and gave his name to the world's highest mountain.
    George and Mary first meet in 1850, when Mary is aged 18; from 1852 George gives her informal lessons in mathematics, and they write to one another. At the time of their marriage, George is aged 40 and Mary 23; despite the age difference, they are closely united and their marriage is happy.
  • Fellow of the Royal Society

    Fellow of the Royal Society
    Boole is elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in London, confirming his reputation as one of the leading mathematicians of his time. Among the distinguished names supporting his admission are Kelland, Kelvin, Tyndall, Graves, Cayley, and the geologist Joseph Jukes who proposes him.
  • Death of George Boole

    Death of George Boole
    George Boole dies tragically early, aged 49, on 8 December 1864. He falls victim to pneumonia, having been soaked in a rainstorm while walking to college and teaching in damp clothes. He is buried in the churchyard of St. Michael's Church of Ireland church at Blackrock, County Cork.