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| From
an article posted on Internet by Professor Walter Felscher,
University of Tuebingen. |
Bolzano, Cauchy, Epsilon, Delta
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1. Today's terminology |
For more than one hundred years, the following definitions have come into common use. Let f be a function defined in a neighbourhood
A number b is defined to be the " B-limit of f at a " if for every e
> 0
Let s be a sequence <x(i): i < w>
of numbers x(i) indexed by the set w
of natural numbers. The sequence s is defined to " converge
for every e
> 0
A number b is defined to be the " C-limit of f at a " if for every sequence s = <x(i): i <
w> with values
in V
Lemma: b is B-limit of f at a if
and only if b is C-limit of f at a .
Let % be one of B or C . The function f is defined
to be %-continuous at a if f(a) is the %-limit of f at a
Lemma: f is B-continuous at a if and only
if f is C-continuous at a .
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2. D'Alembert's program. |
Jean-Baptist le Rond d'Alembert (17.11.1717 - 29.10.1783) was, together with Euler and the brothers Bernoulli, one of the mathematicians representing the heroic age of calculus. Together with Denis Diderot he also edited the "Encyclop/edie ou Dictionnaire Raisonn/e des Sciences, des Arts et des M/etiers". In its 9th volume of 1765 he wrote in the article "Limite" On dit qu'une grandeur est la limite d'une
autre grandeur, quand la seconde peut approcher de la premi\ere plus
pr\es que d'une grandeur donn/ee, si petite qu'on la puisse supposer,
sans pourtant que la grandeut qui approche, puisse jamais surpasser la
grandeur dont elle approche; en sorte que la diff/erence d'un pareille
A proprement parler, la limite ne conincide
jamais, ou ne devient jamais /egale, a la quantit/e dont elle est
la limite; mais celle-ci s'en approche toujours deplus en plus et peut
en diff/erer aussi
In its 4th volume 1754 of he wrote in the article "Diff/erentiel" Celui-ci nous paro^it suffire pour faire
entendre aux commen,cans la vraie m/etaphysique du calcul diff/erentiel.
Quand une fois on l'aura bien comprise, on sentira que la supposition que
l'on y
Il ne s'agit point, comme on le dit encore
ordinairement, de quantit/es infiniment petites dans le calcul diff/erentiel;
il s'agit uniquement de limites de quantit/es finites. Ainsi la m/etaphysique
& des quantit/es infiniment petites plus grandes ou plus petites
les unes que les autres, est totalement inutile au calcul diff/erentiel.
On ne se sert du terme d'infiniment petit, que pour abr\eger les
expressions. Nous ne dirons donc pas avec bien des g/eometres qu'une quantit/e
est infiniment petite, non avant qu'elle s'/evano"uisse, non apr\es qu'elle
est /evano"uie,
Reading these words today, we may receive the
impression that they might as well have been written at the time of Weierstrass,
of Cantor,
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3. Bolzano. |
Bernhard
Bolzano (5.10.1781-18.12.1848 ) studied mathematics in Prague with Stanislav
Vydra and Franz-Josef Gerstner. At the same time, he had studied theology,
and in 1805 , only days before receiving his doctorate in mathematics,
he was ordained as a (secular) priest; already in 1807 he obtained a chair
in "Religionslehre" in Prague.
In this position, in 1817 Bolzano published a book of 60 pages with the title Rein analytischer Beweis des Lehrsatzes,
dass zwischen je zwey Werthen, die ein entgegengesetzes Resultat gewaehren,
wenigstens
Here he gave a definition of continuity of a function f at an argument x : if x is such argument then the difference f(x+w)-f(x) can be made smaller than any given quantity if only w is assumed as small as wanted I have shown that whenever Bolzano uses his definition in his proofs, this use consists precisely in the verification of given e > 0 , there is d > 0 such that w < d implies |f(x+w)-f(x)| < e . For example, in the case of a particular
f Bolzano determines, on p.58 of his book, for a given e
(he uses the letter D ) the number
Thus Bolzano's notion of continuity is intended precisely as that of B-continuity. At first sight, Bolzano's concepts, presented
with unambiguous perspicacity, appear to have sprung from his head, as
Pallas did spring from that
Bolzano does not appear to have had contact with
mathematicians apart from his acquaintances in Prague. In consequence,
his mathematical work remained completely unknown and came to the notice
of the mathematical community only thirty years after his death. In particular,
Bolzano's writings had no influence upon the re-discovery
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4. Cauchy |
4A. Cauchy on variables and their limitsToday's mathematical textbooks still use the word 'variable', but they do not define a mathematical object named by this word. A 'variable' today is a linguistic object, a letter employed to denote, and it is only implicitly that the student learns to speak about that. This conforms to the tendency to view mathematics as dealing with concepts only and to disregard connections with the language used tospeak about them. In modern mathematics, this elimination of linguistic features has been carried out with remarkable (and sometimes regrettable) success. Augustin Louis Cauchy (21.8.1789 - 23.5.1857) set out to fulfill d'Alembert's program in his two textbooks of analysis : Cours d'Analyse de l'/Ecole Royale Polytechnique
, Paris 1821 (reprinted in Oevres Compl\etes,
R/esum/e des Le,cons donn/ees a l'/Ecole Royale Polytechnique sur l'Calcul Infinit/esimal , Paris 1823 (reprinted in Oevres Compl\etes, s/er.2 , vol.4 ) In both books, Cauchy begins by attempting to give a mathematical description of what is conceived as a limiting process. He explains on page 4 of 1821 (Oevres 3 , p.19) the term "variable quantity" On nomme quantit/e variable celle que l'on consid\ere comme devant recevoir successivement plusieurs valeurs diff/erentes les une apr\es des autres. On d/esigne une semblable quantit/e par une lettre prise parmi les derni\eres de l'alphabet. ... He proceeds to explain limits of such assignments: Lorsque les valeurs successivement attribu/ees
\a une m^eme variable s'approchent ind/efiniment d'une valuer fixe, de
mani\ere \a finir par en diff/erer aussi petit que l'on voudre, cette
In particular, there are variables with assignments which have the limit zero: Lorsque les valeurs num/eriques successives d'une m^eme variable d/ecroissant ind/efiniment, de mani\ere \a s'abaisser au-dessous de tout nombre donn/e, cette variable devient ce qu'on nomme un infiniment petit ou une quantit/e infiniment petite. Une variable de cette esp\ece a z/ero pour limite. The same definitions appear in 1823 (Oevres 4
, p.16). In Cauchy's further text then, when these definitions are referred
to, the phrase "aussi petit que l'on voudre" usually is expressed by saying
that the difference, between the values of an assignment to the variable,
and the fixed value can be made smaller than any given positive number.
4B. Comments
The ranges of assignments are not specified either, but it appears clear from Cauchy's words that they shall be num/eriques, i.e. consist of real numbers. Note : Cauchy says that values are assigned to a variable, he does not use the defineed notion of an assignment. Nor does he distinguish notationally between (1) a variable, for which he
(2) an assignment, and (3) the values of that assignment: quite often x then also stands for a value assigned.]
Cauchy's purpose when introducing the quantit/ees
infiniment petitesis expressed in
Mon but pricipal a /et/e de concilier la rigeur, dont je m'/etais fait une loi dans mon Cours d'analyse, avec le simplicit/e qui r/esulte de la cond/eration directe des quantit/es infiniment petites. It rests on the observation that a number c is
the limit of the assignment of values j to the variable x if and only if
0 is the limit of the assigment of j-c to the variable x-c , i.e. this
variable under that
As an informative example, let me quote from 1823 , Oevres 4 , p.18 : Cela pos/e, si la variable y est exprim/ee en fonction de la variable x par l' /equation (1) y = f(x) , D_y
, ou l'accroissement de y correspondent \a
(3) y + D_y = f(x + D_x) . [p.19] ... Il est bon d'observer que, des /equations (1) et (2) r/eunies, on conclut (5) D_y = f(x + D_x) - f(x) . Soient maintenant h et i deux
quantit/es distinctes, la premi\ere finie, la seconde infiniment
petite, et a =
i/h le rapport infiniment petit de ces deux quantit/es. Si
l'on attribue
D_x = i = a.h , la valeur de D_y , savoir f(x+i) - f(x) ou f(x + a.h) - f(x) sera ordinairement une quantit/e infiniment petite. C'est ce que l'on verfiera ais/ement \a l'/egard des fonctions A^x , ... auxquelles correspondent les diff/erences A^x+i - A^x = (A^i - 1).A^x , ... dont chacune renferme un facteur A^i - 1 ou ... qui converge ind/efiniment avec i vers zero. So Cauchy here considers a quantit/e infiniment
petite i and a quantit/e finite h (of which we are not certain whether
it shall be understood as a positive number or as a variable with an assignment
converging to something different from zero). Cauchy then writes a = i/h
which is (a variable with) an assigment having as values the quotients
of the values of i and the value(s) of h (there is the obvious notational
confusion which comes from denoting both the variable i and its
D_y : A^x+i - A^x = (A^i - 1).A^x . Thus here D_y is a quantit/e infiniment petite, presented by the quantit/e infiniment petite B with values A^i - 1 and the constant number A^x . In particular, the above example shows that the
three quantit/ees infiniment petites i , D_y
and B have as values ordinary real numbers(and all converge to zero). There
are no 'infinitesimal', non-Archimedean numbers ever used by Cauchy for
his quantit/ees infiniment petites.
4C. d'Alembert versus CauchyThe definitions of a limit quoted from d'AlembertOn dit qu'une grandeur est la limite d'une autre grandeur, quand la seconde peut approcher de la premi\ere plus pr\es que d'une grandeur donn/ee, si petite qu'on la puisse supposer, ... and from Cauchy Lorsque les valeurs successivement attribu/ees
\a une m^eme variable s'approchent ind/efiniment d'une valuer fixe, de
mani\ere \a finir par en diff/erer aussi petit que l'on voudre, cette
have the same content. They both contain the "for every epsilon" in the form of approcher .. plus pr\es que d'une grandeur donn/ee, si petite qu'on la puisse supposer and
yet neither cares to mention the "there exists
delta" - presumably as their authors considered it as obvious that an approximation,
once achieved, would finally progress to the better. The difference between
the two authors is the use they make of their definitions: Cauchy wanted
to exhibit more than d'Alembert, wanted to prove consequences
The origins of Cauchy's theory of the derivative.
Who gave you the Epsilon ? Cauchy and the
origins of rigorous calculus.
has pointed out the location where this took place:
the Th/eorem\e in 1823 , Ouevres 4 , p.44 ; Cauchy there even employed
both the letters e
and
[While these articles list Bolzano's booklet in their references, their appreciation expressed of Cauchy "It is a commonplace that Augustin-Louis
Cauchy gave the first generally acceptable account of the basic
concepts of the calculus" (1978 , p.380)
appears as rather one-sided. ] 4D. ContinuityCauchy's definition of continuity in 1821 pp.34-35 (Oevres p.43) reads Cela pos/e, la fonction f(x) sera, entre
les deux limites assign/ees \a la variable x , fonction continue
de cette variable, si, pour chaque valeur de x interm/ediaire entre ces
limites, la valeur
This are actually two formulations. In 1823 only the second one appears in the definition of continuity. It should be noted that in the first formulation
x actually is kept fixed and that here the letter a now denotes a variable.
The first formulation says that |f(x+a)-f(x)| decreases indefinitely "together"
The formulation "en d'autres termes" expresses the meaning: if the assignment with values a is a quantit/e infiniment petite then so is the assignment with values |f(x+a)-f(x)|. But if x is fixed and a is a variable, then a converges to zero if and only if x+a converges to x , and as f(x) then is fixed as well, also |f(x+a)-f(x)| converges to zero if and only if f(x+a) converges to f(x) . So here Cauchy again defines C- or B-continuity. As far as I can see, Cauchy nowhere uses the first
formulation in his examples. His second formulation he puts to use, among
other things,
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5. Bolzano versus Cauchy |
The
works of Bolzano and Cauchy, from which the information discussed here
was taken, were written for different purposes. Cauchy wrote
textbooks, destined to support his introductory lectures on analysis. The purpose of lectures is to teach new things, and it is a didactical technique to also use motivations from known things and from intuition. What Bolzano wrote was not a textbook, but an
essay laying the conceptual foundation for a particular, basic notion of
analysis: continuity.
Cauchy in his textbooks covered many more theorems
than Bolzano in his foundational essay. [There are extensive manuscripts
on analysis
Both Bolzano and Cauchy have given definitions
of continuity which express today's B- and C-continuity. Both made their
definitions precise, using them in the sense of today; both employed them
by comparing numbers and their differences with help of inequalities in
order to prove
Cauchy once used the letters e
and d in connection
with limits; Bolzano instead used D and omega in connection with continuity
[though he did use both letters e
and d, albeit in
a different connection, in the proof of his pages 47-48]. Were we to write
a
But the history of mathematics is not one of denotations,
it is a history of inventions and concepts. And there 1817 counts four
years
- o -
Outside of mathematics, the fates of both men were decisively determined by the political developments of their times. An extensive biographical notice on Bolzano can
be found in the "Biographisches Bibel-Lexikon", accessible online at www.bautz.de/bbkl
. Having had his mind formed at the time of Josephine enlightenment, Bolzano
was called to a chair established with the purpose of counteracting
Lazare Carnot in 1792 had been one of the conventionels
regicides; later he had been Napol/eon's last minister of the interior.
In 1815
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6. Bestiarium infinitesimale |
In the
preceding sections, Bolzano's formulations required no interpretation to
fit into today's terminology. Cauchy, on the other hand, wrote about quantit/ees
infiniment petits which do not appear in today's terminology. He did so,
however, only after introducing limits in a terminology needing no interpretation
either, and the
quantit/ees infiniment petites he defined as a special case of limits. Thus together with the term limit also the term quantit/ee infiniment petite received an interpretation in today's terminology which, in the following, I shall call the standard interpretation. Cauchy thus used the quantit/ees infiniment petites as a (rigorous) fa,con de parler, a device permitting to formally keep a connection with the past that had conceived infinitesimals as numbers from a lower class of Archimedicity. Abraham Robinson (1918-1974) embedded the real
numbers R into a non-Archimedean field S in which all L-sentences true
in R hold as well. [There L is a language with names for all real numbers,
predicate symbols for all sets and relations of and between real numbers,
and with function symbols for all real functions. It then becomes possible
to extend the notions of 'standard' analysis from R to a 'non-standard'
analysis on S where now the presence of infinitesimal numbers, i.e. numbers
less than
In his book "Nonstandard Analysis" of 1966 Robinson quoted Cauchy's definitions on pp.269-270 and then continued: We gather from the above passages that
infinitely small quantities are fundamental in Cauchy's approach to Analysis.
However, these
Whatever the precise picture of an infinitely
small quantity may have been in Cauchy's mind, we may examine his subsequent
definitions and see what they amount to if we interpret the infinitely
small and infinitely large quantities mentioned in them in the sense of
Non-standard Analysis. For the notion of continuity, Cauchy's
With this last paragraph Robinson introduces what I choose to call the Robinson interpretation: (a) where Cauchy writes about quantit/ees infiniment petites assume them as infinitesimal numbers in the sense of Non-standard Analysis and (b) read Cauchy's following developments under this assumption, together with assuming today's (or Weierstrass') standard knowledge about distinctions such as usual versus uniform continuity etc. This interpretation resulted in beautiful mathematical
insights. In particular, certain erroneous statements of Cauchy's (on series
of
Cauchy, Convergence and Continuity. British J.Phil.Sci. 22 (1971) 27-37 The concept of 'variable' in nineteenth
century analysis. British J. Phil.Sci. 30 (1979) 266-278
But it must be emphasized that Robinsons's interpretation is in no way an explanation of the historical content of Cauchy's writings, and it is clear from Robinson's word's above that it does not purport to be one. Cauchy wrote explicitly that his quantit/ees infiniment petites have valeurs num/eriques, real numbers : "Lorsque les valeurs num/eriques successives d'une m^eme variable ... ". Of course, the non-Archimedean, infinitesimal
numbers of Pascal, say, were still in the back of Cauchy's and his contemporaries'
minds. But
And so we have had a glance at the bestiarium
infinitesimale.
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7. The workings of finitarization |
Mathematical
analysis is astonishing.
It is not surprising that one can prove insights about triangles or about numbers, for instance the decomposition into prime factors and its uniqueness. But analysis deals with infinite processes, or at least what we imagine to be such - and yet we manage to prove our statements by writing only a finite number of lines. We speak of a function or a variable approaching
some value indefinitely; we imagine a limiting process. Bolzano's and Cauchy's
analysis of the notions of limit and of continuity started from e,
as a measure of approximation, and proceeded to the d
on which e depends.
Expressed with e
and
So far, the e
and d (and in case
of sequences also the n and N ) appear as handles, as grips, affixed to
the stages of those infinite processes. If appropriately handled in our
mental exercises,
And so the quantifier rules are some of the few
places in the mathematical teddy bear's fur where the stitches become visible.
The seams below
W.F.
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Last update February 4, 2000 Author: Phill Schultz, schultz@maths.uwa.edu.au |
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