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The Renaissance Of Mathematics

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Title: The Renaissance Of Mathematics


1
The Renaissance Of Mathematics
  • Europe in the 14th and 15th Centuries

2
Little Ice Age
  • Events following the the collapse of Rome
  • Series of rainfall and colder climate compared
    to the great flood of Genesis
  • Disastrous crop failure led to famine
  • Towns lost 10 percent of their inhabitants in 6
    months

3
Black Death
  • Cause of the Black Death
  • Lasted for several years and returned in
    intervals for 12 15 years
  • Great Plague of London in 1665 was the last
    English eruption
  • 800 people died each day in Paris
  • 10,000 people were buried in a single mass grave
    the first 6 weeks

4
The Smoke of War
  • War was also a factor during this time
  • Hundred Years War
  • Those who survived the plague may not have been
    so lucky in the war
  • Populations of towns still decreasing

5
The Cultural Rebirth
  • By approximately 1450, the calamities of war,
    plague, and famine had tapered off.
  • The invention of printing revolutionized the
    transmission and dissemination of ideas.
  • The study of Mathematics shifted from the means
    of survival to the battle of scholars.
  • Italian mathematics of the 1500s can be
    summarized in the names of del Ferro,Tartaglia,
    Cardan, Ferrari, and Bombelli.

6
Problems Of The Time
  • Problem 1
  • Find three numbers, the second of which exceeds
    the first by 2, and the third of which exceeds
    the second by 2 also, and whose product is 1000.
  • Problem 2
  • Find a number whose cube added to three times
    its square makes 5.

7
Battle of the Scholars
  • The first person to solve cubic equations
    algebraically was Scipione del Ferro.
  • Antonio Maria Fior, a pupil of del Ferro, was
    often entrusted with the solution method.
  • Fior used this to his advantage by challenging
    others to contests at mathematical
    problem-solving.

8
Battle of the Scholars
  • The search for the general solution to the
    previously unsolved cubic equation led to the
    dispute between Gerolamo Cardano and Niccolo
    Tartaglia.
  • It is impossible to discuss the debate without
    first giving brief biographies of the antagonists
    to show why they acted as they did.

9
The Life of Tartaglia
  • Niccolo Tartaglia (whose actual family name was
    Fontana) was born in Brescia, Italy, about the
    turn of the sixteenth century.
  • Nearly killed as a teenager when the French
    captured his home town in 1512.

10
The Life of Tartaglia
  • Although his early years were spent in poverty,
    Tartaglia was determined to educate himself.
  • Tartaglia was self taught in mathematics, but was
    able to earn his living teaching at Verona and
    Venice.

11
Isnt It Ironic
  • Tartaglia, a man disfigured by a saber,
    contributed to the ultimate obsolescence of the
    saber by his pioneering work Nova Scientia
    (1537), on the application of mathematics to
    artillery fire. Tartaglias new science was, of
    course, ballistics. Even though the theories were
    completely wrong, he was the first to offer a
    theoretical discussion as against the so-called
    experience of gunners.

12
A Suspicious Character
  • Tartaglias unfortunate early experiences may
    have encouraged a suspicious character.
  • Self-taught, he was jealous of his prerogatives
    and constantly impelled to try to establish his
    intellectual credentials.
  • Either through intent or simple ignorance of the
    literature, he had a habit of claiming other
    peoples discoveries as his own.

13
Fior Challenges Tartaglia
  • About 1510, del Ferro found a general solution to
    x3 ax b, but he died before he could publish
    his discovery.
  • Fior, trying to gain a reputation by exploiting
    his masters discovery, challenged Tartaglia to a
    public problem-solving contest.

14
The Terms of the Challenge
  • Each contestant was to propose 30 problems, the
    victor being the one who could solve the greatest
    number within 50 days.
  • Shortly before the appointed date, Tartaglia
    devised a scheme for solving cubics that lacked
    the second-degree term.

15
Tartaglia Wins
  • Tartaglia entered the competition prepared to
    handle two types of cubics, whereas his opponent
    was equipped for but one.
  • Within two hours, Tartaglia had reduced all 30
    problems posed to him to particular cases of the
    equation x3 ax b, for which he knew the
    answer.
  • Of the problems Tartaglia put to Fior, the latter
    failed to master a single one.

16
The Life of Cardano
  • Girolamo Cardano or Jerome Cardan was born in
    Milan (now Italy) in Sept. 1501
  • Illegitimate child of Fazio Cardano and Chiara
    Micheria
  • Cardan attended a university until war broke out
    and forced to leave
  • In 1525 he was awarded his doctorate in medicine

17
Cardans Mishaps
  • Cardan achieved near miraculous cures and
    developments in the medical field
  • Unfortunately, his personal life was not as
    accepting as his career
  • His eldest son was put to death for poisoning his
    own wife
  • Cardan cut the ears off his youngest son for
    attempting the same crime

18
The Mishaps Continue
  • Cardan was a compulsive gambler
  • However, he lost more than he gained
  • He was known as one of the first to think about
    probability as a theory

19
Cardan Predicts the Future
  • He cast the horoscope of Jesus Christ
  • Predicts his own date of death
  • Suicide held the prediction to truth

20
Mathematical Works of Art
  • Cardan wrote a book on the Games of Chance
  • This book was the first for the theory of
    probability
  • Ars Magna (The Great Art) first printed in 1545
    and is classified as a text on algebraic
    equations.

21
Fictitious Numbers
  • Cardan was first to take notice that negative
    roots were positive numbers
  • He also was first to say that a cubic might have
    3 roots.
  • His popularity of the solution to the cubic
    equation is further noted as a dispute between
    he and Tartaglia

22
Back to the Challenge
  • Cardan was writing the Practica arithmeticae
    generalis at the time of the Fior-Tartaglia
    Challenge.
  • Because Pacioli had earlier stated that there
    could not be a general solution to the cubic,
    Cardan had ignored this topic.
  • Upon hearing that Tartaglia had a solution for x3
    ax b, he tried to find one.

23
The Debate
  • Cardan failed to find the general solution, so he
    asked Tartaglia for the solution so that he might
    publish it under Tartaglias name.
  • Tartaglia refused, stating he would publish the
    solution himself at a later date. This prompted
    Cardan to label Tartaglia as greedy and unwilling
    to help mankind.

24
Tartaglia Tells
  • Because of these insults, a correspondence
    developed between the two mathematicians.
  • Cardan, in the hope of learning the secret,
    invited Tartaglia to visit him.
  • After much flattery, Tartaglia revealed his
    method of solution in a cryptic poem, provided
    that Cardan swore an oath that he would never
    reveal the solution.

25
Cardan Breaks His Oath
  • Rumors began to circulate that Tartaglia was not
    the first to discover of the cubic formula, and
    in 1543 Cardan journeyed to Bologna to try to
    verify these reports.
  • After examining the papers of del Ferro, he
    concluded that del Ferro was the one who had made
    the breakthrough.

26
Cardan Breaks His Oath
  • In 1545, Cardan published the Ars Magna, which
    contained Tartaglias solution of the cubic with
    a statement that del Ferro and Tartaglia had each
    found solutions by independent research.

27
Practice Problems
  • Section 7.3
  • (1, 2, 3, 5-11)
  • Section 7.4 Read section (1, 3, 5)

28
Rafael Bombelli
  • Born in 1526 in Bologna, Italy
  • Bombellis hometown is where all the disputes
    have taken place
  • He was 9 years old when the dispute between Fior
    and Tartaglia took place
  • He was 19 when Cardan published Ars Magna

29
Algebra
  • It took several years, but Bombelli wrote the
    text Algebra
  • However, out of the 272 problems in the book at
    least 143 of them were originally discovered by
    Diophantus

30
Imagine That
  • Bombelli was the first mathematician that
    accepted imaginary numbers
  • He was also the first to write down rules for
    addition, subtraction, multiplication of
    complex numbers

31
Rules
  • Plus of minus times plus of minus makes minus
    -n . -n -n
  • Plus of minus times minus of minus makes plus
    -n . - -n n
  • Minus of minus times plus of minus makes plus -
    -n . -n n
  • Minus of minus times minus of minus makes minus
    - -n . - -n -n

32

                                              
            
33
Quartic Equation
  • After the cubic had been solved, it was only
    natural that mathematicians should attack the
    quartic (fourth-degree) equation.
  • Cardan, unsuccessful at solving the quartic
    equation, turned it over to his disciple Ludovico
    Ferrari (1522-1565).
  • Ferrari, using the rules for the solving the
    cubic, eventually succeeded where his master had
    failed.

34
The Life of Ferrari
  • Ferrari, the son of poor parents, was taken into
    Cardans household as a servant boy at the age of
    14.
  • Ferrari was exceptionally gifted, and Cardan
    undertook to instruct him in Latin, Greek, and
    mathematics.
  • Ferrari joined the fray surrounding the solution
    of the cubic by swearing that he had been present
    at the fateful meeting between Cardan and
    Tartaglia.

35
Ferrari Challenges Tartaglia
  • When Tartaglia had seen Ars magna, he publicly
    denounced Cardano for breaking an oath sworn on
    the gospels, and he ridiculed Cardanos
    mathematical ability.
  • Cardano disdained to refute the slur, but Ferrari
    attacked Tartaglia.
  • Ferrari challenged Tartaglia to a public debate
    on mathematics and all related subjects.

36
Tartaglia Answers Back
  • Tartaglia answered with further insults and
    refused the debate.
  • After a further exchange of insults, each
    proposed thirty-one questions which were
    exchanged, answered, and returned.
  • No decision was reached because each tore the
    others answers to shreds.

37
The Debate
  • Tartaglia accepted a debate to be held in Milan,
    Cardanos stronghold.
  • On August 10th, 1548, Tartaglia and Ferrari met
    in combat, Cardan having left town.

38
The Debate
  • Very little is know about the debate.
  • Tartaglia left after the first day, claiming to
    have won, although it seems Ferrari won by
    default.
  • An indication of Ferraris triumph is that
    Tartaglia lost his teaching post in Brescia, and
    Ferrari was invited to lecture in Venice.

39
Colorful Episode Ends
  • Tartaglia died in 1557 without publishing his
    solution to the cubic.
  • Ferrari became a professor of mathematics at
    Bologna in 1565 and died the same year, having
    been poisoned with white arsenicby his own
    sister, as rumor had it.
  • With Cardans death in 1576, one of the most
    interesting and colorful episodes in the history
    of mathematics ended.

40
A mathematical problem should be difficult in
order to entice us, yet not completely
inaccessible, lest it mock at our efforts.
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