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Leonhard Euler wrote several influential mathematics textbooks throughout his career covering topics from arithmetic to calculus. The textbooks, totaling over 4000 pages, presented material to be studied independently rather than through lectures. While comprehensive, Euler's textbooks differ substantially from modern curricula in scope, intended audience, and teaching methods.

Euler wrote textbooks on arithmetic (Einleitung zur Rechen-Kunst), algebra (Vollständige Anleitung zur Algebra), pre-calculus (Introductio in analysin infinitorum), differential calculus (Institutiones calculi differentialis), and integral calculus (Institutionum calculi integralis).

Euler's Einleitung zur Rechen-Kunst covered arithmetic, his Vollständige Anleitung zur Algebra covered algebra, his Introductio in analysin infinitorum covered pre-calculus topics, his Institutiones calculi differentialis covered differential calculus, and his Institutionum calculi integralis covered integral calculus.

Leonhard Euler, Textbook Author

Ed Sandifer
ABSTRACT
Euler's four-volume 2500 page calculus text is often described as the origins or
foundations of the modern calculus curriculum. This idea should not be accepted without
some reflections. For example, few modern mathematics curricula include properties of
elliptic integrals, as does Euler's Calculus integralis. His other textbooks are sometimes
characterized incorrectly as well. We describe the content and intent of some of Euler's
textbooks, and make some comparisons with the modern curriculum.

INTRODUCTION
Late last year, I was writing an encyclopedia entry on Euler. I wrote:

His four volume series of calculus books form the


basis for the modern calculus curriculum, and was the first
successful calculus textbook. It climaxes a complete series
of mathematical textbooks, including arithmetic, algebra
and the Introductio in analysin infinitorum, a textbook on
the mathematics Euler thought was necessary to understand
calculus.
Fortunately, by the time I had the chance to revise the article, I had read the Calculus
integralis, and I was able to remove the words form the basis for the modern calculus
curriculum.
This experience gives purpose to this article: to describe the contents and
pedagogy of several of Eulers textbooks, including his calculus texts, and to compare
them to the modern curriculum.
Euler wrote textbooks on arithmetic, algebra, pre-calculus and differential and
integral calculus. Vital statistics are given in the table below:
Topic

Short title

Arithmetic

Einleitung zur
Rechen-Kunst
Vollstndige
Anleitung zur
Algebra
Introductio in
analysin
infinitorum
Institutiones
calculi
differentialis
Institutionum
calculi integralis

Algebra

Pre-calculus

Differential
calculus
Integral calculus

Year(s)
published
1738, 1740

Enestrm
number(s)
17, 35

Pages

1770

387, 388

356, 532

1748

101, 102

320, 398

1755

212

880

1768, 1769,
1770

342, 366,
385

542, 526, 639

277, 228

Another work, the three volumes of the Letters to a German Princess, should
perhaps also be considered a textbook, but we omit it from this discussion for three
reasons. First, it is not really a mathematics text. It is more of a popular science text.
Second, there is nothing in the modern curriculum to which it compares. Third, and
perhaps most important, we havent read it carefully, and would just as soon save it for
another article.

Moreover, his great calculus of variations book, the Methodus inveniendi of 1744,
reads much like a textbook, and perhaps Euler intended it as such. In any case, this is a
big question and well beyond the scope of this article.
Excluding the Letters to a German princess and the Methodus inveniendi leaves
us with plenty of material. The five textbooks fill ten volumes, and at 4172 pages of text,
not counting prefaces and tables, this curriculum is rather bulky, even by modern
standards.
Euler wrote texts throughout his career. He wrote the mathematical texts at a
pace of approximately one per decade, and, except for the Algebra, which appeared the
same year as the Calculus integralis, he wrote them in their order in the curriculum, from
arithmetic to integral calculus. We will discuss them in the order of the curriculum.
RECHEN-KUNST
Einleitung zur Rechen-Kunst zum Gebrauch des Gymnasii bey der Kayserlichen
Academie der Wissenschafften in St. Petersburg, or the Rechen-Kunst, for short, was
published anonymously, the first volume in 1738 and the second in 1740. Two volumes
of a Russian edition appeared in 1740. The title page is shown in the illustration at the
beginning of this article. When he delivered his loge in 1783, Eulers son-in-law,
Nicolas Fuss, revealed what by then must have been an open secret that Euler himself had
written the books.
The short title, Rechen-Kunst is usually translated as Introduction to Arithmetic.
The word rechen is the root of the English word reckon.
The first part, or Erster Theil, takes 277 pages in the German original, 162 pages
in the Opera Omnia. The second is 228 pages in the original, 143 in the reprint. The first
part is available on line at the site at the University of Bielefeld given in the references.
The first part contains nine chapters.
The first chapter, Von der Arithmetic oder Rechenkunst berhaupt, or On
arithmetic or Rechenkunst in general, is about number names and place values. It is
worth noting that, for Euler, it takes a million millions to make a billion, as in Germany
today, not a thousand millions as in Canada and the US. The chapter consists of eleven
numbered paragraphs, most of which contain a rule, an explanation of the rule and a
few examples of how to use it. In some chapters, paragraphs also explain why the rule
might be true, but Euler doesnt do this in this first chapter.
The chapter ends with six examples, with answers, involving the age of the earth,
King Solomon, Kaiser Augustus, the King of Assyria, Archimedes, and the number
12345678900987654321.
The remaining eight chapters of the first part explain the algorithms for addition,
subtraction, multiplication and division, first of whole numbers, then of fractions. Most
chapters have a structure similar to the first chapter. There are relatively few exercises at
the end of each chapter, but what exercises there are are fairly difficult and quite literate.
The second part begins with 29 pages of tables of money and weights from
around Europe and how the weights compare with each other. There follow five chapters
on the arithmetic of such numbers with units. Euler calls them bennanten Zahlen,
named numbers.

The first chapter is on resolution and reduction. Resolution is changing a larger


unit into a smaller one, as pounds to ounces or rubles to kopeks. Reduction is the
opposite process, changing a smaller one into a larger one, as pence into shillings and
pounds.
The second chapter is about addition and subtraction of such named numbers,
and, of course, depends heavily on the resolution and reduction of the previous chapter.
The third chapter is about the multiplication and division of named numbers by whole
numbers, the fourth on division of named numbers by other named numbers, and the last
chapter is about multiplication and division of named numbers by fractions.
This last chapter has some unusual twists. For example, when multiplying by
5 1 1
numbers like 5/24, Euler suggests that since
= , it is easier to divide first by
24 3 8
three, then by eight, and subtract the results. The technique seems almost like an
Egyptian unit fraction calculation. Euler is quite taken by the method and he does several
examples.
This is a rather interesting and exciting conclusion to the Rechen-Kunst. Two
things about the work are particularly striking. First, the book is written for a quite
literate audience. The students learning from this book already know how to read well
and have a good foundation in the classics. They know about King Solomon, Kaiser
Augustus and Archimedes. They apparently dont know even the most basic arithmetic,
but they are expected to learn it by reading a lot of explanation and not very many
examples or exercises. Rdiger Thiele, in a private communication, [T] suggests that this
may be because the book was written for what he calls a Latin school, the so called
Gymnasium attached to the Academy of Sciences as part of its charter. Apparently
students entering the Gymnasium already had a primary education that included reading,
history and religious studies. Records of the St. Petersburg Academy [Ac] show that the
students at the Gymnasium were more or less evenly split between children of the
German community in St. Petersburg and children of the lesser Russian aristocracy,
hence the need for editions of the Rechen-Kunst both in Russian and in German.
The second striking thing about the book is the small amount of material it covers,
just the four basic arithmetic operations on positive integers, on fractions, and on named
numbers. Let us compare the contents of the Rechen-Kunst with a popular early
American arithmetic textbook by Daniel Adams. [Ad] We use an 1817 printing, though
nearly identical versions were in print from 1801 until at least 1833. This edition is 216
pages long, and includes all of the material in the Rechen-Kunst except the multiplication
and division of named numbers. On the other hand, Adams also includes decimal
fractions, interest, both simple and compound, the Rule of Three, involution, evolution,
square and cube roots, areas and volumes of circles and polygons, and a number of
applications, like the rules of partnerships, examples for painters, glaziers and joiners,
and more. He also does a bit of multiplication of named numbers when he shows how to
calculate areas by multiplying lengths given in feet and inches. Moreover, Adams has far
more exercises than Euler. A modern student would be much more comfortable learning
from Adams than from Euler. Thiele [T] suggests that Euler modeled his Rechen-Kunst
on Rudolff or on Stifels Coss. Adams seems to resemble arithmetics by Hodder or
Cocker, published in England at about the same time as the Rechen-Kunst.

ALGEBRA
Having been surprised by the style and content of the Rechen-Kunst, should we
expect the unexpected of his Algebra as well? We confess that we have not looked at the
Algebra as closely as we have looked at some of the other textbooks, so the remarks that
follow may be a bit shallow at times.
Eulers Algebra was extremely
popular. When it appeared in 1770, Euler
was the pre-eminent mathematician and
scientist in all of Europe, with a reputation
akin to that of Albert Einstein, still the
standard of genius 50 years after his death.
The Volstndige Anleitung zur Algebra
was published in Russian in 1768 (two
years before the German edition,) in Dutch
in 1773, in French in 1774, in Latin in
1790, and in English in 1797. It was still
the standard textbook in Germany a
hundred years after it was first published,
and the author has in his collection a copy
that was apparently used as a textbook in
the German speaking communities of
upstate New York in the 1880s. The
original German edition was published in
two volumes of 356 and 532 pages
respectively, and given Enestrm index
numbers 387 and 388. The modern
Springer edition is 462 pages, plus an
appendix of 131 pages by LaGrange. We
work from this edition.
The book is organized into two
parts, what were the two volumes of the original German edition. Each part has
paragraph numbers, 800 paragraphs in Part 1, 248 in Part 2. The German edition has
three sections in Part I and two sections in Part II. In the English edition, the first section
of Part II has been moved to Part I. Sections, in turn, are divided into at least a dozen
chapters.
The Algebra doesnt exactly pick up from where the Rechen-Kunst left off. The
student is expected to know how the arithmetic of positive numbers and of fractions, but
the material in the second part of the Rechen-Kunst is deemed irrelevant. In Volume 1
paragraph 6, Euler writes:
6.
In Algebra, then, we consider only numbers which represent
quantities, without regarding the different kinds of quantity. These are
the subjects of other branches of mathematics.
Four paragraphs later he writes:

10.
All this is evident; and we have only to mention that in
Algebra, in order to generalize numbers, we represent them by letters,
as a, b, c, d, &c.
From there, Euler moves rather quickly. On page 38 (of the Springer edition) we
learn about square roots and that many of them are irrational. On page 42 we learn about
Impossible, or Imaginary Quantities. Fractional exponents come on page 56, and
logarithms on page 69. There are a good number of exercises. For example, on page 59,
among Questions for practice respecting surds. we find:
19.

Divide a 2 ad b + d b by a b
Ans. a + b d

Section II of Part I begins on page 76 and is titled Of the different Methods of


calculating Compound Quantities. We would call them multinomials. The section
seems innocent enough at the outset, but after we learn the binomial theorem, the next-tolast section applies it with fractional exponents to expand roots of binomials into infinite
series, and the last uses negative exponents. We also learn the long division algorithm
for polynomials, and, as a consequence, the formula for the sum of an infinite geometric
series.
Much of the material that seemed to be missing in the Rechen-Kunst appears in
Section III, decimals, arithmetic progressions, proportion and geometric progressions.
Like many others of his day, Euler enjoys figurate numbers. One of his exercises, on
page 145 is:
439. Question. A person bought a house, and he is asked how much
he paid for it. He answers that the 365th gonal number of 12 is the
number of crowns which it cost him.
In order to find this number, we make m=365, and n=12; and
substituting these values in the general formula [given on the previous
page], we find for the price of the house 23970 crowns.
Section IV of Part I of the English edition is Section I of Part II of the German
edition, and the paragraph numbers were changed. It is a difficult chapter, titled Of
Algebraic Equations, and of the Resolution of those Equations. Here, we learn how to
solve simultaneous linear equations, with examples involving up to three variables, and
polynomial equations up to the fourth degree. We also learn a variation on Newtons
method for approximating roots of equations.
There are a great many exercises, most of which are rather dry and computational,
but one stands out as unusually witty:
612. Question 3. A mule and an ass were carrying burdens
amounting to several hundred weight. The ass complained of his, and
said to the mule, I need only one hundred weight of your load, to make

mine twice as heavy as yours; to which the mule answered, But if you
give me a hundred weight of yours, I shall be loaded three times as
much as you will be. How many hundred weight did each carry?
It is also interesting to note the variety of ways the familiar quadratic formula can
be written. Euler gives the roots of x 2 + px = q with the formula x = 12 p

1
4

p2 + q .

The last section of the text is devoted to what Euler calls the analysis of
indeterminate quantities, and LaGrange calls Diophantine Algebra. Euler shows how
to find integer or rational solutions to certain first, second and third degree equations. On
page 405, he shows that Fermats Last Theorem is true in the case n = 4, a proof that
Fermat himself had found. On page 449 he proves it in the case n = 3, the first known
proof in that case. In the rest of the section, Euler reviews a great many of his own
results in quadratic forms, showing what numbers can be represented as ax2 + by 2 for
given values of a and b.
Eulers Algebra is dramatically different from his Rechen-Kunst. It covers many
times as much material in only about 50% more pages. It has many more exercises. A
modern student might struggle with the volume of material, but that student would be
fairly comfortable with the pedagogy. Where the Rechen-Kunst seems quite different
from other texts, the Algebra seems to be part of a line of texts that goes through, say
Bordons text in French, Davies English translation and adaptation, and then the late 19th
and early 20th century texts that lead to those that are familiar today.
THE INTRODUCTIO
Eulers Introductio in analysin infinitorum is regarded by many, Frederick
Rickey, [R] for example, as Eulers greatest work, indeed, one of the greatest single
works in the history of mathematics.
Rickey enjoys comparing the table of contents of the Introductio with that of
LHpitals differential calculus book published 50 years earlier. LHpitals full title is
Analyse des infiniment petits, pour lintelligence des lignes courbes, and, as the title
suggests, LHpital believes that calculus was useful to understand curves. A few of his
chapter titles are:
II.
III.
VII.
VIII.

The use of the calculus of differences to find the Tangents of all sorts of curved
lines
The use of the calculus of differences to find the largest and smallest ordinates, to
which are reduced the questions De maximis & minimis
The use of the calculus of differences to find Caustics of refraction
The use of the calculus of differences to find the points of curved lines which
touch an infinity of lines given in position, straight or curved.

To LHpital, clearly the primary object is the curve. The equations that describe
the curve are mere properties of the curve.

A few of the chapter titles from the first book of the Introductio, on the other
hand, are
I.
II.

On Functions in General
On the Transformation of
Functions
IV.
On the Development of Functions
in Infinite Series
VI.
On Exponentials and Logarithms
XII. On the Development of Real
Rational Functions
XIII. On Recurrent Series
XVIII. On Continued Fractions
All of these chapters are about
functions, not about curves. Even chapters
like VI, XIII and XVIII that do not
mention functions in their title deal with
functions as the primary objects. Curves
play no role.
The second volume of the
Introductio, though, has an entirely
different emphasis. It is about curves, and
how to use analysis to understand curves.
A few of its chapter titles are:
I.
III.
VIII.
XIV.
XIX.
XXI.

On Curves in General
On the Classification of Algebraic Curves by Orders
Concerning Asymptotes
On the Curvature of a Curve
On the Intersection of Curves
Transcendental Curves

It is widely accepted that during the 18th century, Mathematics underwent a


transformation from a geometric approach, as characterized by LHpital, to an analytic
one, as in Book I of the Introductio. By 1755 when Euler published the Calculus
differentialis, as we will see, he was almost completely committed to analysis over
geometry, but in 1748, it seems he still had divided loyalties.
The mathematics of the Introductio itself is spectacular. It is the first important
book to treat trigonometric functions as functions rather than as measurements. We see
exponentials and logarithms for the first time in almost the same way we do them now,
though Euler does use infinite numbers and infinitesimals in his calculations and
derivations. Because Euler used the symbols e and in the Introductio to denote those

constants, their use has become standard today. A merely superficial discussion of just
the highlights of the Introductio would be a long paper in itself. The reader, surely being
an interested reader, will want to read the Introductio itself. Fortunately, John Blantons
English translation is widely available [E101], and Fred Rickey has given us a guide to
reading the Introductio. [R]
The pedagogy of the Introductio is very different from the Rechen-Kunst or the
Algebra. There are no exercises, and there are relatively few examples. There are only
four examples, all in the chapter on exponentials and logarithms, that can fairly be
described as word problems.
It is hard to know how the student is expected to use the Introductio to learn. In
fact, this is related to one of the most difficult questions we can ask. The figures of the
past have left us a great many books and other texts. We read them today, but we can
only speculate how the people who wrote them and their contemporaries who studied
them actually read the texts. Still, a speculation is more interesting than a shrug, so we
will speculate.
The Introductio obviously requires a good deal more reader involvement than
todays undergraduate textbooks require. The student is expected to follow the examples,
probably to invent variations on the problems and to work them out as well. This is
behavior more typically expected of graduate students today. It is how Serge Lang
expects his readers to behave in his famous exercise at the end of his chapter on
homology [L, p. 105]:
EXERCISES
Take any book on homological algebra, and prove all the
theorems without looking at the proofs given in that book.
DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS
We now turn to the first of Eulers calculus textbooks, the Calculus differentialis
of 1755. Eulers calculus sequence, at 2587 pages, dwarfs the most prolix of todays
texts. The four calculus volumes of the Opera Omnia, Series 1 volumes 10 to 13, occupy
6 inches (16 cm) of my bookshelf.
As usual, the Calculus differentialis is divided into two parts, the first of 9
chapters, the second of 18, but this time they were published as a single, huge 880-page
volume rather then being split into two volumes. John Blanton [E212] has translated the
first part into English, and for this part we use his translation when discussing this part of
the work. We resort to the Opera Omnia for our comments on the second part.
To Euler, differential calculus is the calculus of differentials, not of derivatives.
In an example (p. 105) on the differentiation of transcendental functions, we find the
differential, not the derivative. It reads:

IV.
If y = ( ln p )( ln q ) with p
and q being any functions of x, by
the product rule given before
dp
dq
dy =
ln q + ln p .
p
q
This, and eight other such
examples, take the place of exercises in
this and other chapters. Another delightful
example of the chain rule appears on page
110:

If

y=e

ee

, then
x

dy = e e e x dx .
ee

ex

Euler bases his entire approach on


the relations between an arithmetic
sequence of values of the independent
variable, x, x + , x + 2 , x + 3, x + 4 ,etc. , and the corresponding values of the
dependent variable, which, for want of subscript notation, he writes
y, y I , yII , y III , y IV ,etc. He defines first differences as y = y I y, yI = yII yI , etc. ,
then second differences, and so forth. Only after he as developed as much theory of
differences as he can does he take to be an infinitely small number and get his
differentials.
Some people criticize Euler for failing to pay attention to the rigorous foundations
of the calculus. This criticism is unjustified. Euler takes great pains in his Preface to try
to secure the foundations, with explanations like this (page viii):
To many who have discussed the rules of differential calculus,
it has seemed that there is a distinction between absolutely nothing and
a special order of quantities infinitely small, which do not quite vanish
completely but retain a certain quantity that is indeed less than any
assignable quantity. Concerning these, it is correctly objected that
geometric rigor has been neglected.
Euler goes on to try to justify the foundations of calculus. He did not neglect
them; he merely failed in his attempts to make them rigorous.
In the Calculus differentialis, Eulers conversion from Geometer to Analyst is
complete. None of the chapter titles mention curves. There are no illustrations in the
entire text, no differential triangles, no tangent lines. The objects of study are functions,
given by rules or as series.

10

The pedagogy resembles that of the Introductio, with many examples, but no
exercises. Many of the examples have a very familiar flavor, for example these from Part
2, the chapter on maxima and minima (p. 470)
EXAMPLE 1
To find the number which has the minimum ratio to its logarithm.
EXAMPLE 2
To find the number x that makes the power

x1:x

a maximum.
1

x
, then to maximize x x .
ln x
Note the archaic use of the notation 1:x for the ratio of 1 to x. Both problems are worked
out in detail and answers given to at ten and fifteen decimal places respectively.

In modern notation, we are asked first to minimize

INTEGRAL CALCULUS
The three volumes of the Calculus integralis seem to be a classic work, more
talked about than read. The volumes of the Opera Omnia in the Yale University
Libraries seemed unread, and had not circulated since the 1970s. Meanwhile, the
Introductio volumes were well worn, and the Algebra had been used so often that it had
been re-bound. Copies on the used book market are rare, and the copies that do appear
are usually in very good condition, symptoms of a book bought as a trophy but not read.
All three volumes did go through three Latin editions, but were translated only into
German, and not into French, Dutch or English. Since print runs were typically very
small, it is likely that there were as few as one or two thousand copies printed.
The three volumes have slightly different titles, describing their different contents.
E342 Institutionum calculi integralis volumen primum in quo methodus integrandi a
primis principiis usque ad integrationem aequationum differentialium primi
gradus pertractatur, 1768
E366 Institutionum calculi integralis volumen secundum in quo methodus inveniendi
functiones unius variabilis ex data relatione differentialium secundi altiorisve
gradus pertractatur, 1769
E385 Institutionum calculi integralis volumen tertium in quo methodus inveniendi
functiones duarum et plurium variabilium, ex data relatione differentialium
cujusvis gradus pertractatur. Una cum appendice de calculo variationum et
supplemento, evolutionem casuum prorsus singularium circa integrationem
aequationum differentialium continente. 1770.
These volumes are even more analytical than the Calculus differentialis, if that is
possible. Euler begins:
Definition 1: Integral calculus is a method of finding from a given
differential relation the quantity itself; and the operation by which this
is done is called integration.
11

Integral calculus seems to be about differential equations and antiderivatives. It is


not about curves or areas. Later he writes (page 9, paragraph 16)
Certain of what is treated in later parts of these elements has greatest
use in Mechanics and in the doctrine of fluids. On account of this,
only the very first rudiments of these things will be treated, and our
second book of integral calculus will be sterile of such commentary,
which, though it has long been necessary, very little has yet been done.
When it is done, it will be seen to confer a great many scientific
advances.
Euler draws his line even
more sharply. His treatment of
integral calculus will include no
applications, either. This leaves
just pure, sterile analysis.
The text itself is stark and
fast moving. After a
praenotanda on the nature of
integral calculus, the curriculum is
structured about a long sequence of
problems, each followed by a
solution, and usually several
corollaries, scholions and
examples. The first two volumes
have 173 such problems, the
numbers continuing from one
volume to the next. The third
volume has 88 problems, with
twenty more problems (and seven
illustrations!) in an appendix on the
calculus of variations. A typical
problem is number 79 from the first volume:
612.

If

:z =

:z
dz

denotes

function

of

such

that

, chosen so that it vanishes when z = 0, then


A + Czz + Ez 4
to investigate the comparisons among such kinds of functions.
The kinds of comparisons Euler means are relations like
: p + : q + : r = 0 . Some readers will recognize this as one of the arc length sum
formulas for elliptic integrals. As we mentioned, the text is fast moving.
This problem is followed by its solution three corollaries and two scholions. Work
a few pages earlier makes it clear how such formulas are related to angle-sum identities
12

for the trigonometric functions. Subsequent problems pose the same question for fourth
degree polynomials that are not missing their terms of odd degree.
The textbook is clearly carefully planned so that the problems integrate so
beautifully, but it also places a tremendous burden on the student, both to master the
material and to relate it to its applications.
The Editors of the Opera Omnia appended to the second volume some notes by
Mascheroni, titled Adnotationes ad calculum integralem Euleri, In quibus nonnulla
Problemata ab Eulero proposita resolvuntur, that is Annotations to Eulers Integral
calculus, in which several problems posed by Euler are resolved. They are about 130
pages of notes, published in Pavia in two parts in 1790 and 1792. Mascheroni
particularly focused on questions relating to , what is now called the Euler-Mascheroni
constant.
The content of Mascheronis notes are surely interesting enough, and they made
him worthy of having his name attached to the constant. It is even more interesting how
they give us a glimpse of how Mascheroni read Euler, and, in turn, how Euler meant
people to read his upper level texts. Mascheroni read Euler in much the same way Lang
[L] urges his students to read homology: read the problem and try to solve it without
looking at the solution given in the book. Then try to anticipate what the next problem
will be and try to solve it before even reading the problem.
CONCLUSIONS
Though we did not state them, we began this paper with three implicit hypotheses:
1.
2.
3.

Eulers textbooks, particularly his calculus books, form


the basis for the modern mathematical curriculum.
Eulers textbooks were immensely influential.
Eulers textbooks were the first that taught mathematics
in the way it is taught today.

At the end of this paper, we find we must reject most of these hypotheses.
1.

Curriculum.
Only the Algebra and certain parts of the first book of the Introductio seem to be
much like what we teach today in algebra and precalculus. The Algebra does seem to
resemble more closely the algebra that was taught from, say, Bordon or Davies in the 19th
century, but the curriculum has changed a good deal since then.
2.

Influence.
The Introductio and the Algebra were, indeed, very influential. Both were
translated into many languages, and the Algebra was an important text for over a hundred
years. The Rechen-Kunst, though, was obsolete just about as soon as it was written, and
the two Calculus books were too difficult for most readers. They were not nearly so
influential.

13

3.

Pedagogy.
Eulers textbooks were written to be studied and read, not to be explained or
lectured about. Though this is the way those of us who have become professionals in the
field learn most of our mathematics, it is seldom the way we teach. When we do teach
like this, it is usually to graduate students, and it is often their first experience in such a
learning mode. Euler even writes arithmetic to be learned like this.
There are a number of reasons we do not teach like this today. First, we would
like to believe that teaching methods may have improved in 250 years. Second, students
have so much more to learn today, and they have many more choices of what to try to
learn. Third, we try to educate a very large segment of our populations in classrooms
much larger than most in the 18th century. In 1750, Berlin had a population of about 1
million (one of the four word problems we mentioned from the Introductio). It would be
astonishing if a hundred of them, that is one hundredth of a percent of them, knew
calculus. With such an elite population of scholars, entry standards could be very high,
much higher than we would accept today.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
What I know of these things, I know because I have read the books themselves.
There is no substitute for original sources. I would like to thank my university for giving
me the liberty, and Yale University for giving me the access to the books and journals,
many of them rare and priceless, that make such studies possible.
[5441]
REFERENCES
[Ac]

Akademiia nauk SSSR, Sbornik materialov dlia istorii Imperatorskoi Akademii


nauk, St. Petersburg, 1865.
[Ad] Adams, Daniel, The Scholars Arithmetic; or Federal Accountant, Stereotype
edition, John Prentiss, Keene, N.H., 1817.
[E17] Anon. (Euler, Leonhard), Einleitung zur Rechen-Kunst zum Begrauch des
Gymnasii bey der Kayserlichen Academie der Wissenschafften in St. Petersburg,
1738. Reprinted in Opera Omnia, Series 3, volume 2. Part I is available on line
at: http://www.math.uni-bielefeld.de/~sieben/euler/rechenkunst.html.
[E101] Euler, Leonhard, Introductio in analysin infinitorum, 2 vols., Bosquet, Lucerne,
1748, reprinted in the Opera Omnia, Series I volumes 8 and 9. English
translation by John Blanton, Springer-Verlag, 1988 and 1990. Facsimile edition
by Anastaltique, Brussels, 1967.
[E212] Euler, Leonhard, Institutiones calculi differentialis cum ejus usu in analysi
finitorum ac doctrina serierum, St. Petersburg, 1755, reprinted in the Opera
Omnia, Series I volume 10. English translation of the first nine chapters by John
Blanton, Springer, New York, 2000.
[E342] Euler, Leonhard, Institutiones calculi integralis volumen primum in quo methodus
integrandi a primis principiis usque ad integrationem aequationum
differentialium primi gradus pertractatur, St. Petersburg, 1768, also volume 2,

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1769, and volume 3, 1770, reprinted in the Opera Omnia, Series I volumes 11, 12
and 13.
[E387] Euler, Leonhard, Volstndige Anleitung zur Algebra, 2 vols., Kayserlichen
Academie der Wissenschafften in St. Petersburg, 1770, reprinted in the Opera
Omnia, Series I volume 1. English translation by John Hewitt, Longman, Hurst,
Rees, Orme and Co., London, 1840. Reprinted by Springer, New York, 1984.
The 1822 edition is available on line at EulerArchive.org.
[L]
Lang, Serge, Algebra, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1970.
[R]
Rickey, V. Frederick, A Readers Guide to Eulers Introductio,
http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/people/rickey/hm/Euler-Introductio.pdf, August,
2002.
[T]
Thiele, Rdiger, private communication, May 21, 2005.

Western Connecticut State University, CT, USA


email: SandiferE@wcsu.edu

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