Autour de pratiques alg\'ebriques de Poincar\'e : h\'eritages de la r\'eduction de Jordan
Frederic Brechenmacher (LML)

TL;DR
This paper explores Poincaré's early algebraic practices, especially his use of Jordan's canonical forms, revealing their influence on his work and the development of group theory in mathematics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed historical and mathematical analysis of Poincaré's adoption and transformation of Jordan's algebraic methods within his broader research context.
Findings
Poincaré's work was heavily influenced by Jordan's canonical forms.
The algebraic practice of classifying linear groups was central to Poincaré's methods.
The study clarifies how group concepts evolved in Poincaré's research.
Abstract
The legacy of Jordan's canonical form on Poincar\'e's algebraic practices. This paper proposes a transversal overview on Henri Poincar\'e's early works (1878-1885). Our investigations start with a case study of a short note published by Poincar\'e on 1884 : "Sur les nombres complexes". In the perspective of today's mathematical disciplines - especially linear algebra -, this note seems completely isolated in Poincar\'e's works. This short paper actually exemplifies that the categories used today for describing some collective organizations of knowledge fail to grasp both the collective dimensions and individual specificity of Poincar\'es work. It also highlights the crucial and transversal role played in Poincar\'e's works by a specific algebraic practice of classification of linear groups by reducing the analytical representation of linear substitution to their Jordan's canonical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Theory of Mathematics
