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Science, historiography of

(2,346 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. IntroductionWherever sciences (Science) have seen themselves as cultural practices of deliberately seeking and establishing new knowledge, an opposition of “old” and “new” knowledge and staging of the history of knowledge and science have been fundamental elements of scientific culture. Accordingly, the rise of the “new science” in early modern Europe (Scientific Revolution) was accompanied by a diverse historiography of science. During the 18th century, that historiographical work coalesced i…
Date: 2021-08-02

Hydrodynamics

(977 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. GeneralDue to its complexity, the mathematical and physical description of the motion of fluids was one of the areas of the mathematical sciences that demanded the application of the most advanced techniques in mathematics, while in the context of the time, there was a productive interaction between problems in hydraulics, experimental study, theoretical analysis and the possibility of effective computation.Moritz Epple2. From the 15th to the 17th century Hydraulic engineering, which had shaped the cities of antiquity, gained great sig…
Date: 2019-10-14

Newtonianism

(2,143 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. IntroductionNewtonianism was a scientific and cultural movement of the 18th century that propagated throughout Europe a view of science inspired by the English mathematician and physicist Isaac Newton (1643–1727). The phenomenon had a number of distinct manifestations: the mainly British Newtonianism of Newton's immediate scientific friends and students (see below, 2.); Newtonianism as a self-styled – and heterogeneous – movement of the European Enlightenment (see below, 3.-5.), and Newtoniani…
Date: 2020-04-06

Geodesy

(1,134 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. Traditions and beginnings in the 16th century The process of measuring of the earth, supported by optical, astronomical and mathematical tools and procedures, was an important component of the new European natural sciences of the 16th and 17th century. This practise was closely tied to maritime navigation and was of economic, military and political significance. As such it served both as a field of application and a driver for innovation in the natural sciences.Modern geodesy had its origins in the manufacturing of maps and globes (Cartography). This practise was k…
Date: 2019-10-14

Mathematics

(672 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
The term “mathematics,” plural in form but treated as singular in English, derives from the Greek plural ta mathematiká (“the mathematical things” – used by Aristotle and others –, from the Greek máthema, subject of “knowledge” or “teaching”) and the Latin loanword mathematica (e.g. in Cicero). Full plural forms are still used in many other European languages today (e.g. French les mathématiques; Spanish las matemáticas). The German singular Mathematik acquired the sense of denoting a unified scientific discipline only at the turn of the 19th century. Before …
Date: 2019-10-14

Geometry

(3,588 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. Historical development: overview From Greek antiquity onwards, the cultures of the Mediterranean considered geometry - the study of figures on the plane and in space - to be the epitome of an exact science, relying on strict proofs based on precisely formulated assumptions. Geometry moreover represented science’s most powerful language for expressing relations of size, trumping the arithmetica universalis. Its domain extended from direct measurement of spatial proportions through astronomy and optics to the art of construction.The early modern era witnessed a remar…
Date: 2019-10-14

More geometrico

(785 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
The term more geometrico (Latin: “in a geometric manner/style”) was introduced into European philosophy primarily through the writings of Baruch de Spinoza. In his  Ethica, ordine [or, often: more] geometrico demonstrata (1677; “Ethics, demonstrated in the geometric manner”), he presented a much-discussed system of philosophical ethics that he considered not only as categorically binding as the system of classical (Hellenistic) geometry, but also as treating its subjects just as literally and precisely as that geometry. …
Date: 2020-04-06

Mathematical instruments

(845 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
The use of equipment to measure and calculate has accompanied the mathematical sciences and practices of calculation and draftsmanship since Grec-Roman antiquity, when drawing instruments – the ruler and the dividers – began to be used in astronomy along with various devices for measuring angles. The development of mathematical instruments for astronomy intensified greatly during the heyday of Arabian Islamic science (10th-13th centuries). The great Arabian observation centers like Maragha (13th…
Date: 2019-10-14

Mathematical sciences

(7,878 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. Introduction The mathematical sciences (Latin disciplinae mathematicae) initially encompassed the fields of mathematical study that dated back to Hellenistic antiquity. Their status in the knowledge culture of the late Middle Ages was low and strictly limited to certain areas (cf. e.g. Mathematics, musical). Over the course of the 16th and 17th centuries, not only did the classical branches of the mathematical sciences enjoy a profound renewal, but new fields emerged alongside them, becoming establi…
Date: 2019-10-14

Differential geometry

(826 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
A key aspect of the renewal of mathematics in the 17th century was the combination of geometric themes with symbolic/calculatory techniques related to the infinitesimal, that is, the infinitely small (Analysis, mathematical; Infinitesimals). This enabled a new way of conducting geometry, the most appropriate term for which in the 17th century is infinitesimal geometry and which from the 18th century onwards - the century of the elaboration of differential calculus - developed further as differential geometry.The main subjects of differential geometry in the 17th and…
Date: 2019-10-14

Analysis situs

(761 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
At the end of the 17th century,  analysis situs (“analysis of the location”) or geometria situs (“geometry of the location”) came into use as an early term for the field of mathematics we today call topology, a new field initially developed very slowly during the 18th and 19th centuries (see Mathematical sciences). Alongside the mathematical theory of probability, its was the most important field of mathematics to be developed totally from the ground up in the Early Modern era, without any roots in antiquity.At the same time as modern analysis (Analysis, mathematical) was c…
Date: 2019-10-14

Optics

(1,238 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. Ancient and medieval traditionsOptics (from the Greek optikós, “of/for sight”) was already developing into a sophisticated mathematical science in Hellenistic Greece, incorporating three branches of optics in the stricter sense: (1) the theory of sight, the eye, and light, including philosophical, physiological, and mathematical aspects (e.g. central perspective); (2) catoptrics (the theory of reflection on mirrored surfaces); and (3) dioptrics (the theory of refraction at transitions between different optical media).Islamic authors, notably Ibn al-Haytham …
Date: 2020-10-06

Ballistics

(1,069 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
Ballistics (the science of the behavior of projectiles) was one of the disciplines that played a key role in the emergence of the new science of the 16th and 17th centuries. It provided both a motivation and one of the trickiest applications for mechanics as a mathematical science of motion. It was also related, not always straightforwardly, with early modern weaponry and artillery.Two concepts of the motion of a projectile were in competition. First, it was possible to see the phenomenon as the motion of a body through a continuous medium. Alternativel…
Date: 2019-10-14

Arithmetic

(1,600 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. General The techniques of arithmetic and the media required are among the earliest cultural achievements of humankind. In many places (e.g. southern Mesopotamia at the end of the 4th millenium BCE), the introduction of writing was associated directly with the techniques of written arithmetical calculation and bookkeeping. Where arithmetical theory emerged, as in ancient Greece, practical calculation naturally remained in use as well; in many cases it had its own separate history, concealed in part by the history of academic mathematics [3]. The latter also includes the te…
Date: 2019-10-14

Equation

(841 words)

Author(s): Epple, Moritz
1. BeginningsEven though the equality of quantities and figures or numbers and ratios is a relationship that had been in use in the mathematical sciences since their beginnings, solving equations, that is, the symbolically expressed equality of two algebraic expressions containing known and unknown quantities, did not become a focus of mathematical problem solving until around 1600 – with the advent of symbolic algebra and the analytic geometry dependent on it. Even earlier, though (building on s…
Date: 2019-10-14

Physics

(2,374 words)

Author(s): Steinle, Friedrich | Epple, Moritz
1. Concept and originsThe present-day understanding of physics as a science concerned with the properties and laws of inanimate matter and the development of mathematically-formulated theories on the basis of experiment and measurement arose only in the late 18th and early 19th centuries out of the wider sense of physics as natural philosophy (Physical sciences). The key development was the focus on a specific subject area and the increasing reliance on quantitative and mathematical procedures (Quantification and measurement) [6. chapter 5]; [5].One important impulse cam…
Date: 2020-10-06

Navigation

(1,761 words)

Author(s): Ellmers, Detlev | Epple, Moritz
1. Seafaring practice European navigation in the early modern period was tasked with ensuring that regular passages under sail from one harbor to another worldwide were conducted as reliably and safely as possible (Deep sea navigation) [7]. It was the responsibility of the captain, with the helmsman as his deputy. The two took alternate watches, each informing the other of the prevailing course when changing the watch. The aft deck gave them the necessary clear all-round view to monitor the condition of the ship and sails, as we…
Date: 2020-04-06