Laplace


The Laplace Transform: Theory and Applications (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics)
Schaum's Outlines: Laplace Transforms
An Introduction to Laplace Transforms and Fourier Series (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series) (Volume 0)
The Love Haters
Higher Engineering Mathematics
How the Fourier Series Works (The Fourier Transform Book 1)
Genios de las matematicas: Laplace, La descripción del universo en unas ecuaciones
Laplace and Fourier Transforms
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W.W. Rouse Ball
The great masters of modern analysis are Lagrange, Laplace, and Gauss, who were contemporaries. It is interesting to note the marked contrast in their styles. Lagrange is perfect both in form and matter, he is careful to explain his procedure, and though his arguments are general they are easy to follow. Laplace on the other hand explains nothing, is indifferent to style, and, if satisfied that his results are correct, is content to leave them either with no proof or with a faulty one. Gauss is ...more
W.W. Rouse Ball, A Short Account of the History of Mathematics

The mathematical exposition is extremely concise and occasionally awkward. Laplace was interested in results, not in how he got them. To avoid condensing a complicated mathematical argument to a brief, intelligible form he frequently omits everything but the conclusion, with the optimistic remark “Il est aisé à voir” (It is easy to see). He himself would often be unable to restore the reasoning by which he had “seen” these easy things without hours—sometimes days—of hard labor.
Eric Temple Bell, Men of Mathematics

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