2.2 History of mathematics after 1400 The History of the Calculus, Carl B. Boyer, 1:1, 1970, 60-86 Kepler's Explanation of the Timaeus Associations, Howard Eves, 1:2, 1970, 31, C, 0.3 Mathematics of the Yoruba People and of Their Neighbors in Southern Nigeria, Claudia Zaslavsky, 1:2, 1970, 76-79 Terminology: logarithm, Howard Eves, 2:2, 1971, 27, C Mathematician, Violinist, FencerÑBolyai, Howard Eves, 3:1, 1972, 41, C How Gauss was Won to Mathematics, Howard Eves, 3:1, 1972, 65, C Eighteenth Century British Mathematics, Phillip E. Johnson, 7:2, 1976, 22-27 A Brief History of Logarithms, R. C. Pierce, Jr., 8:1, 1977, 22-26 Women Mathematicians, Debra Charpentier, 8:2, 1977, 73-79 Martin Gardner: Defending the Honor of the Human Mind, Irving Joshua Matrix, 10:4, 1979, 227-244 The Pentagram and the Discovery of an Irrational Number, James R. Choike, 11:5, 1980, 312-316, 0.3 On the History and Solution of the Four-Color Map Problem, John Mitchem, 12:2, 1981, 108-119, 3.1 An Informal History of Formal Proofs: From Vigor to Rigor?, Klaus Galda, 12:2, 1981, 126-140 The Universal Domination of Geometry, J. Dieudonne, 12:4, 1981, 227-231 Structure vs. Substance: The Fall and Rise of Geometry, Robert Osserman, 12:4, 1981, 239-246 A Profile of Ronald L. Graham, Gina Bari Kolata, 12:5, 1981, 290-301 A Machine as Smart as God, Rudy Rucker, 13:2, 1982, 115-121, 9.1 Paul Halmos: Maverick Mathologist, Donald J. Albers, 13:4, 1982, 226-242 John Horton Conway: Mathematical Magus, Richard K. Guy, 13:5, 1982, 290-299 The Thread, Philip J. Davis, 14:2, 1983, 98-104 Solomon Lefschetz: A Reminescence, Albert W. Tucker, 14:3, 1983, 225-227 A Glimpse at the Polya Picture Album, G. L. Alexanderson, 14:4, 1983, 274-294 Shiing-shen Chern: A Man and His Times, Willian G. Chinn and John Lewis, 14:5, 1983, 370-376 A Historical Sketch of Olympiads: USA and International, Nura D. Turner, 16:5, 1985, 330-335 The International Mathematical Olympiad Training Session, Cecil Rousseau and Gregg Patruno, 16:5, 1985, 362-365, 0.3, 9.3 The Autobiography of Julia Robinson, Constance Reid, 17:1, 1986, 2-21 Teaching Elementary Probability through its History, Sharon Kunoff and Sylvia Pines, 17:3, 1986, 210-219, 7.2 The Bernoullis and the Harmonic Series, William Dunham, 18:1, 1987, 18-23, 5.4.2 Charlotte Angas Scott 1858-1931, Patricia C. Kenschaft, 18:2, 1987, 98-110 Isaac Newton: Man, Myth, and Mathematics, V. Frederick Rickey, 18:5, 1987, 362-389 Evolution of the Function Concept: A Brief Survey, Israel Kleiner, 20:4, 1989, 282-300, 9.5 FFF #12. The Authority of the Written Word, Ed Barbeau, 20:5, 1989, 404, F The Function sin x / x, William B. Gearhart and Harris S. Shultz, 21:2, 1990, 90-99, 5.1.2, 5.1.5 The Birth of the Eotvos Competition, Agnes Arvai Wieschenberg, 21:4, 1990, 286-293, 9.3 Two Surprising Theorems on Cavalieri Congruence, Howard Eves, 22:2, 1991, 118-124, 0.3 Reading Bombelli's x-purgated Algebra, Abraham Arcavi and Maxim Bruckheimer, 22:3, 1991, 212-219, 0.7 Euler and the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, William Dunham, 22:4, 1991, 282-293, 0.7 Misconceptions about the Golden Ratio, George Markowsky, 23:1, 1992, 2, 0.3 The Algorists vs. the Abacists: An Ancient Controversy on the Use of Calculators, Barbara E. Reynolds, 24:3, 1993, 218-223 A "Very Pleasant Theorem", Roger Herz-Fischler, 24:4, 1993, 318-324, 0.3 Euler and Differentials, Anthony P. Ferzola, 25:2, 1994, 102-111, 5.1.3 Isaac Newton: Credit Where Credit Won't Do, Robert Weinstock, 25:3, 1994, 179-192, 0.5, 5.1.3, 5.4.3, 5.6.1 Newton's Orbit Problem: A Historian's Response, Curtis Wilson, 25:3, 1994, 193-200, 0.5, 6.4 In Defense of Newton: His Biographer Replies, Richard S. Westfall, 25:3, 1994, 201-205, 5.4.3 In Defense of Newton: A Physicist's View, A. P. French, 25:3, 1994, 206-209, 0.5, 5.6.1 Robert Weinstock Replies, Robert Weinstock, 25:3, 1994, 209-211 Newton's Principia and Inverse-Square Orbits, N. Nauenberg, 25:3, 1994, 212-221, 0.5, 6.4, 6.5 Robert Weinstock's Response to Nauenberg, Robert Weinstock, 25:3, 1994, 221-222, 0.5 Leibniz and the Spell of the Continuous, Hardy Grant, 25:4, 1994, 291-294, 9.5 An Invitation to Integration in Finite Terms, Elena Anne Marchisotto and Gholam-Ail Zakeri, 25:4, 1994, 295-308, 5.2.4, 5.2.5, 5.2.9 Functions of a Curve: Leibniz's Original Notion of Functions and Its Meaning for the Parabola, David Dennis and Jere Confrey, 26:2, 1995, 124-131, 0.3, 0.5 Mathematics and the Liberal Arts II, Hardy Grant, 30:3, 1999, 197-203, 2.1 The Witch of Agnesi, S. I. B. Gray and Tagui Malakyan, 30:4, 1999, 258-268, 5.1.3 Artemas Martin: An Amateur Mathematician of the Nineteenth Century, Patricia R. Allaire and Antonella Cupillari, 31:1, 2000, 22-34 On ÒThe Witch of AgnesiÓ, Antonella Cupillari, 31:2, 2000, 144-145, C Against the Odds, Martin Gardner, 32:1, 2001, 39-43, 3.2 Was Calculus Invented in India?, David Bressoud, 33:1, 2002, 2-13, 0.6, 5.4.3 Where Do Functions Come From?, Leigh Atkinson, 33:2, 2002, 107-112, 2.1 Spanish Colonial Mathematics: A Window on the Past, Ed Sandifer, 33:4, 2002, 266-278 A Very Brief History of Statistics, Howard W. Eves, 33:4, 2002 How Simple is Gravitation?, Paul Wolfson, 33:4, 2002, 350-352, C The Bicentennial of American Mathematics Journals, David E. Zitarelli, 36:1, 2005, 2-15 Phoebe Floats!, Ezra Brown, 36:2, 2005, 114-122, 6.3, 9.6 Taylor Series Ð A Matter of Life or Death, The Observer (U.K.), 36:3, 2005, 237, C, 5.4.3 Jan Hudde and the Quotient Rule before Newton and Leibniz, Daniel J. Curtin, 36:4, 2005, 262-272 The Origins of Finite Mathematics: The Social Science Connection, Walter Meyer, 38:2, 2007 106-118 Mathematical Streets, Charles Marion, 38:4, 2007, 264, C Pursuit Curves for the Man in the Moone, Andrew J. Simoson, 38:5, 2007, 330-338, 6.4, 9.10 (see also A Smoother Flight to the Moon, Stan Wagon, 39:1, 2008, 48) Christiaan Huygens and the Problem of the Hanging Chain, John Bukowski, 39:1, 2008, 2-11, 0.3, 5.3.3 Tuning with Triangles, Leon Harkleroad, 39:5, 2008, 367-373, 9.2