Ada Lovelace Independent Quotations
Ada Lovelace Quotes about:
Independent Quotes from:
- All Independent Quotes
- Albert Einstein
- Maria Montessori
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Thomas Jefferson
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Ayn Rand
- Bernie Sanders
- George Washington
- Henry David Thoreau
- Hillary Clinton
- Ada Lovelace
- Deepak Chopra
- Diane Von Furstenberg
- James Madison
- Milton Friedman
- Vladimir Putin
- Alexander Hamilton
- Billy Bob Thornton
- John Adams
- John F Kennedy
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Exercise Quotes
It must be evident how multifarious and how mutually complicated are the considerations which the working of such an engine involve. There are frequently several distinct sets of effects going on simultaneously; all in a manner independent of each other, and yet to a greater or less degree exercising a mutual influence.
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Peculiar Quotes
In studying the action of the Analytical Engine, we find that the peculiar and independent nature of the considerations which in all mathematical analysis belong to operations, as distinguished from the objects operated upon and from the results of the operations performed upon those objects, is very strikingly defined and separated.
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Together Quotes
Secondly, figures, the symbols of numerical magnitude, are frequently also the symbols of operations, as when they are the indices of powers. Wherever terms have a shifting meaning, independent sets of considerations are liable to become complicated together, and reasoning and results are frequently falsified.
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Brain Quotes
It were much to be desired, that when mathematical processes pass through the human brain instead of through the medium of inanimate mechanism, it were equally a necessity of things that the reasonings connected with operations should hold the same just place as a clear and well-defined branch of the subject of analysis, a fundamental but yet independent ingredient in the science, which they must do in studying the engine.
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Reality Quotes
The further we analyse the manner in which such an engine performs its processes and attains its results, the more we perceive how distinctly it places in a true and just light the mutual relations and connexion of the various steps of mathematical analysis; how clearly it separates those things which are in reality distinct and independent, and unites those which are mutually dependent.