Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "安德鲁·福赛斯" in Chinese language version.
A. R. Forsyth (1858-1942) was a Fellow of Trinity from 1881 and Sadleirian Professor from 1895 until 1910 when he resigned due to having an affair with a colleague
These were reformed into the Sadleirian chair of mathematics in 1860 and the holder has generally been a Trinity man. The holders have been: Arthur Cayley (1863-1895), for whom the Chair was re-established; A. R. Forsyth (1895-1910);
Everybody knows him as the author of the age in most successful book on differential equations that has ever appeared in any language; although it was first published as long ago as 1885, it is still being reprinted. I would venture the opinion that this work has done more than anything else to retard the true development of the subject; for over two generations it has continued to put wrong ideas into people's heads concerning the nature and scope of the theory and, thanks to the author's forceful and authoritative style, in this it has been overwhelmingly successful.
A. R. Forsyth (1858-1942) was a Fellow of Trinity from 1881 and Sadleirian Professor from 1895 until 1910 when he resigned due to having an affair with a colleague's wife. In 1913, he went to Imperial College, London.
A. R. Forsyth (1855-1942) was Professor and Head of Mathematics in 1913-1923.
A. R. Forsyth (1858-1942) was a Fellow of Trinity from 1881 and Sadleirian Professor from 1895 until 1910 when he resigned due to having an affair with a colleague
These were reformed into the Sadleirian chair of mathematics in 1860 and the holder has generally been a Trinity man. The holders have been: Arthur Cayley (1863-1895), for whom the Chair was re-established; A. R. Forsyth (1895-1910);
Everybody knows him as the author of the age in most successful book on differential equations that has ever appeared in any language; although it was first published as long ago as 1885, it is still being reprinted. I would venture the opinion that this work has done more than anything else to retard the true development of the subject; for over two generations it has continued to put wrong ideas into people's heads concerning the nature and scope of the theory and, thanks to the author's forceful and authoritative style, in this it has been overwhelmingly successful.
A. R. Forsyth (1858-1942) was a Fellow of Trinity from 1881 and Sadleirian Professor from 1895 until 1910 when he resigned due to having an affair with a colleague's wife. In 1913, he went to Imperial College, London.
A. R. Forsyth (1855-1942) was Professor and Head of Mathematics in 1913-1923.