Cornelis de Waard
Cornelis de Waard was a Dutch mathematics teacher and a historian who specialized in researching science and mathematics of the seventeenth century.
Biography
De Waard studied mathematics and physics in Amsterdam and was then a teacher in The Hague, Winschoten, and from 1909 until retirement in 1944, lived in Vlissingen.Historical work
De Waard was particularly concerned with mathematicians of the first half of the 17th century such as René Descartes, Pierre de Fermat, Gilles Personne de Roberval, Blaise Pascal, Girard Desargues. He discovered and published several original writings of scholars of the seventeenth century, including 8 volumes of the correspondence Marin Mersenne and the journals of Isaac Beeckman. He assisted Étienne Gilson in the preparation of his edition of Descartes' Discourse on the Method. In his 1906 “De uitvinding der verrekijkers”, one of the first modern works on the subject, he put forward evidence that supported Middelburg spectacle-maker Zacharias Janssen as the inventor of the device.Published works
- “De uitvinding der verrekijkers”
- The expedition of Cornelis Evertsen the Younger
- L'experience barometrique. Ses antecedents et ses explications, A historical study
- Works of Fermat, Paris.
- Correspondence of P. Marin Mersenne, minor religious, Presses universitaires de France, XVII volumes
- Journal of Isaac Beeckman from 1604 to 1634, Ed. Martinus Nijhoft, The Hague.