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TREATISE

ON

DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS.

SUPPLEMENTARY VOLUME.

BY THE LATE

GEORGE BOOLE, F.R.S.

PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS IN THE QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY, IRELAND,
HONORARY MEMBER OF THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.

Cambridge and London:
MACMILLAN AND CO.

1865.

[The right of Translation is reserved.]

PREFACE.

THE present volume contains all that Professor Boole wrote for the purpose of enlarging his Treatise on Differential Equations. Had he lived to publish the second edition he would doubtless have incorporated his more recent investigations with the original work, and it is therefore necessary to explain why another plan has been adopted.

In some cases Professor Boole had indicated that certain portions of the original work were to be omitted and their places supplied from the manuscripts; but on examination it appeared that in subsequent passages of the work there were references and allusions to the portions thus marked to be omitted which would not apply to the substituted matter. Thus in attempting to carry out the directions it would have been necessary to accept the responsibility of making many alterations, and consequently to incur the risk of failing in the attempt to improve the original form.

Moreover the Treatise had been for some time out of print, and the long delay which must have been caused by the labour of reconstruction would have produced serious inconvenience to students at Cambridge and elsewhere. Professor Boole himself was always especially anxious to consult

the advantage of students, and those who had the charge of his manuscripts were naturally inclined to adopt a course of which they believed he would himself have approved.

The design of reconstructing the Treatise was therefore abandoned; and it was resolved that the original volume should be reprinted, and that the manuscripts should be collected and published separately. This plan has the obvious recommendation of enabling those who are already familiar with the original work to turn their attention readily to the new investigations. It will be seen that many of the Chapters of the present volume may be regarded as independent essays or memoirs which lose nothing by being separated from the other volume; and indeed no indications had been left by Professor Boole of the place which such Chapters were to occupy in the enlarged edition.

I have printed all the unpublished matter relating to Differential Equations which I found among Professor Boole's papers. In a few cases it will be seen that an investigation is incomplete; such investigations have however been included in the volume, because I was unwilling that anything should be lost which so great a mathematician had written on a subject he had long and carefully studied.

I trust that no serious error will be found in the volume, and that any faults which may be detected will be excused on account of the nature and difficulty of the task that had to be performed. Many of the manuscripts had not been finally revised; some of them were very obscure and had to be carefully and laboriously copied for the press. In general the equations were not numbered, and thus only

blanks occurred in place of references; this circumstance often caused great trouble and perplexity: I hope however that a satisfactory result has been finally attained.

I may state for the benefit of those who are conversant with the first edition of the original work that the theorem which in the present volume is cited as contained in Chap. II. Art. 1 will be found in Chap. IV. Art. 2 of the first edition: the change was made by the direction of Professor Boole's interleaved copy. It was judged convenient to number the Chapters in the present volume in continuation of those in the original work.

All additions of my own are enclosed within square brackets. The sheets have been read by the Rev. J. Sephton, Fellow of St John's College, as well as by myself, and the volume is much indebted to his care and accuracy. Obvious mistakes in the manuscripts were of course corrected; thus, for example, the table at the end of the volume was calculated by Mr Sephton, because the table in the manuscript was rendered erroneous by the use of a wrong sign in a formula.

ST JOHN'S COLLEGE,
November, 1865.

I. TODHUNTER.

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