Pierre Joseph Étienne Finck

Pierre Joseph Étienne Finck

Front page of Principes de l'analyse infinitésimale (1841)
Born (1797-10-15)October 15, 1797
Lauterbourg, France
Died July 27, 1870(1870-07-27) (aged 72)
Strasbourg, France
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Strasbourg
Alma mater École Polytechnique
Known for Euclidean algorithm

Pierre Joseph Étienne Finck (1797-1870) was a French mathematician.

Life and work

Fink, who became orphan at twelve years, was educated by a merchant of Landau (Pfalz). In 1815, he entered in the École Polytechnique, where he graduated in 1817. After some time studying in the Artillery School, he left París for Strasbourg before 1821.[1]

From 1825 he was professor in the Artillery School of Strasburg and, simultaneously, professor of special mathematics in the Collége de Strasbourg. In 1842 he was appointed adjunct professor of applied mathematics in the University of Strasbourg where he was appointed full professor in 1847.[2]

From 1862 he began to suffer from ill health. He was intellectually diminished,[3] and he was forced to take sick leave in 1866. He retired in 1868.

Finck wrote seven text books on algebra, geometry, mechanics and calculus, and more than twenty articles published in the Journal de Mathematiques Pures et Appliquees, in the Annales de Gergone and in the Comptes rendus of the French Academy of Sciences.[4]

References

  1. Shallit, page 411.
  2. Shallit, page 412.
  3. Heck, page 310.
  4. Shallit, page 413.

Bibliography

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.