Johann muller biography
- Regiomontanus (1436–1476), German mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, translator, instrument maker and Catholic bishop · Johann Müller .
- Johann Müller was a German scholar who made important contributions to trigonometry and astronomy.
- Johannes Peter Müller was a German physiologist, comparative anatomist, ichthyologist, and herpetologist, known not only for his discoveries but also for his ability to synthesize knowledge.
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My name is Johann H. Muller and I was born in Pretoria, South Africa. I went to Holland on a student exchange when I was 18 and totally fell in love with the country. I moved to Amsterdam 2 years later to study Dutch tax law and I have since lived in London, New York and Copenhagen. I worked as a tax consultant with big four accounting firms in Holland and various Dutch law firms in Holland, the UK and the US. When I got tired of internal politics at my last law firm, I started my own web based business, focusing on Dutch international tax law, EU law and tax training. During this time I published my first book, "The Netherlands in international tax planning". Having married a Dane, I moved to Denmark where I worked as inhouse tax professional for 6 years before switching to the the Danish competent authority on transfer pricing. My area of specialization is international corporate taxation. I am a generalist in this area working and writing on topics such as EU direct taxation, transfer pricing, tax treaties and international tax cases. Besides the book mentioned above,
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Johann Jakob Müller
Swiss physiologist and physicist
For the German moral philosopher, see Johann Jakob Müller (philosopher).
Johann Jakob Müller (4 March 1846 – 14 January 1875) was a physiologist and physicist.
Education
In 1868, he obtained his "Dr. med." degree from the University of Zurich, under Adolf Fick with a thesis entitled: Untersuchungen über den Drehpunkt des menschlichen Auges (Investigations into the pivot point of the human eye). As part of these studies he variously studied in the University of Zurich, University of Leipzig, and University of Heidelberg.
Career
In Leipzig, 1870, he became a dozent (lecturer) in physiology. In 1871 he became a professor in physics at the polytechnic institute in Zurich.
See also
References
- Poggendorff, J. C. (1898), Biographisch-Literarisches Handwörterbuch der exakten Naturwissenschaften, vol. 3, Leipzig: Johann Ambrosius Barth, p. 945.
External links
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Johann Müller
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(Regiomontanus).
German astronomer, b. in or near Königsberg, a small town in lower Franconia (Dukedom of Coburg), 6 June, 1436; d. in Rome, 6 July, 1476. The name of the family agreed with the trade of the father who operated a mill. Regiomontanus signed himself Johannes de Monteregio, while in foreign countries he was known as Joannes Germanus or Francus. His calendars were published under various names, like Meister Hans von Kungsberg. About the age of twelve he was sent to Leipzig to study dialectics. In the university matriculations (published by Erler, 1895) his name is not registered. Hearing of the celebrated astronomer Peurbach (George of Peurbach in Upper Austria, 1423-61), Müller left Leipzig for Vienna, where he was matriculated in 1450 as Johannes Molitoris de Kunigsperg. In 1452 he received the baccalaureate and in 1457
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