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A preliminary course in mathematics at Collège Royal in Besançon in session 1820-21 prepared him for entry to École Normale Supérieur in Paris which he entered in 1821. However his time there was disrupted when the École Normale Supérieur was closed down. Cournot remained in Paris and, along with his fellow student Dirichlet , was taught mathematics at the Sorbonne by Lacroix and Hachette . In 1823 Cournot became a tutor but continued his work in mathematics receiving his doctorate in 1829 for a thesis Le mouvement d'un corps rigide soutenu par un plan fixe. Poisson was impressed with Cournot and, in 1833, he obtained a position for him with the Academy in Paris . During this time he translated John Herschel 's Treatise on astronomy into French, it was published in 1834. Again with Poisson 's recommendation, Cournot was appointed to a newly created chair in analysis at Lyon in 1834. In Cournot writes of Poisson 's opinion of his first papers in mechanics:
In 1835 Cournot became professor of mathematics at Grenoble and rector there. Three years later he became inspector general of public education. In this same year (1838) he published Recherches sur les principes mathématiques de la théorie des richesses in which he discussed mathematical economics, in particular supply- and- demand functions. He also considered conditions for equilibrium with monopoly, duopoly and perfect competition. He considered the effect of taxes, treated as changes in production costs, and discussed problems of international trade. He gives a definition of a market which is the basis for that still used in economics:
This work makes Cournot a pioneer of mathematical economics, 25 years before Jevons . Cournot also worked on probability and although his investigations into a logical foundation for it were unsuccessful, his work did lead the way to future important developments. He, as Poisson and Condorcet did, applied probability to legal statistics. Cournot also well known for his views on scientific knowledge. He wrote:
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |