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Adolphe Quetelet

Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet FRSF or FRSE (French: [kətlɛ] ; 22 February 1796 – 17 February 1874)[1] was a Belgian astronomer, mathematician, statistician and sociologist who founded and directed the Brussels Observatory and was influential in introducing statistical methods to the social sciences. His name is sometimes spelled with an accent as Quételet.[2][3]

Adolphe Quetelet
Born
Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet

(1796-02-22)22 February 1796
Died17 February 1874(1874-02-17) (aged 77)
NationalityBelgian
Alma materUniversity of Ghent
Known forcontributions to social physics
AwardsForMemRS (1839)[1]
Scientific career
Fieldsastronomer
mathematician
statistician
sociologist
InstitutionsBrussels Observatory

He also founded the science of anthropometry and developed the body mass index (BMI) scale, originally called the Quetelet Index.[4] His work on measuring human characteristic to determine the ideal l'homme moyen ("the average man"), played a key role in the origins of eugenics.[5][6][7]

Biography Edit

Adolphe was born in Ghent (which, at the time was a part of the new French Republic). He was the son of François-Augustin-Jacques-Henri Quetelet, a Frenchman and Anne Françoise Vandervelde, a Flemish woman. His father was born at Ham, Picardy, and being of a somewhat adventurous spirit, he crossed the English Channel and became both a British citizen and the secretary of a Scottish nobleman. In that capacity, he traveled with his employer on the Continent, particularly spending time in Italy. At about 31, he settled in Ghent and was employed by the city, where Adolphe was born, the fifth of nine children, several of whom died in childhood.

Francois died when Adolphe was only seven years old. Adolphe studied at the Ghent Lycée, where he afterwards started teaching mathematics in 1815 at the age of 19. In 1819, he moved to the Athenaeum in Brussels and in the same year he completed his dissertation (De quibusdam locis geometricis, necnon de curva focal – Of some new properties of the focal distance and some other curves).

Quetelet received a doctorate in mathematics in 1819 from the University of Ghent. Shortly thereafter, the young man set out to convince government officials and private donors to build an astronomical observatory in Brussels; he succeeded in 1828. He became a member of the Royal Academy in 1820. He lectured at the museum for sciences and letters and at the Belgian Military School. In 1825, he became a correspondent of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands, in 1827 he became a member. In 1839, he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[8] From 1841 to 1851, he was a supernumerary associate in the institute, and when it became Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences he became foreign member.[9] In 1850, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

Quetelet also founded several statistical journals and societies, and was especially interested in creating international cooperation among statisticians. He encouraged the creation of a statistical section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BA), which later became the Royal Statistical Society, of which he became the first overseas member. In 1853 he chaired both the International Maritime Conference and the First International Statistical Congress. He was a founding member of the first Société des douze.

In 1855, Quetelet developed apoplexy, which diminished but did not end his scientific activity.[citation needed]

He died in Brussels on 17 February 1874, and is buried in the Brussels Cemetery.

In 1825, he married Cécile-Virginie Curtet.[10]

Work Edit

His scientific research encompassed a wide range of different scientific disciplines: meteorology, astronomy, mathematics, statistics, demography, sociology, criminology and history of science. He made significant contributions to scientific development, but he also wrote several monographs directed to the general public. He founded the Royal Observatory of Belgium, founded or co-founded several national and international statistical societies and scientific journals, and presided over the first series of the International Statistical Congresses. Quetelet was a liberal and an anticlerical, but not an atheist or materialist nor a socialist.

Social physics Edit

The new science of probability and statistics was mainly used in astronomy at the time, where it was essential to account for measurement errors around means. This was done using the method of least squares. Quetelet was among the first to apply statistics to social science, planning what he called "social physics". He was keenly aware of the overwhelming complexity of social phenomena, and the many variables that needed measurement. His goal was to understand the statistical laws underlying such phenomena as crime rates, marriage rates or suicide rates. He wanted to explain the values of these variables by other social factors. These ideas were rather controversial among other scientists at the time who held that it contradicted the concept of freedom of choice.

His most influential book was Sur l'homme et le développement de ses facultés, ou Essai de physique sociale, published in 1835 (In English translation, it is titled Treatise on Man, but a literal translation would be "On Man and the Development of his Faculties, or Essay on Social Physics"). In it, he outlines the project of a social physics and describes his concept of the "average man" (l'homme moyen) who is characterized by the mean values of measured variables that follow a normal distribution. He collected data about many such variables. Quetelet wrote about these values as "ideals" with deviations from them as being less than or more than ideal. He saw the average body as an ideal beauty and something to be desired and his work was influential on Francis Galton who coined the term eugenics.[5][6][7]

Quetelet's student Pierre François Verhulst developed the logistic function in the 1830s as a model of population growth; see Logistic function § History for details.[11]

When Auguste Comte discovered that Quetelet had appropriated the term 'social physics', which Comte had originally introduced, Comte found it necessary to invent the term 'sociologie' (sociology) because he disagreed with Quetelet's notion that a theory of society could be derived from a collection of statistics.

Adolphe Quetelet also had a significant influence on Florence Nightingale who shared with him a religious view of statistics which saw understanding statistics as revealing the work of God in addition to statistics being a force of good administration. Nightingale met Quetelet in person at the 1860 International Statistical Congress in London, and they corresponded for years afterwards.[12]

Criminology Edit

Quetelet was an influential figure in criminology. Along with Andre-Michel Guerry, he helped to establish the cartographic school and positivist schools of criminology which made extensive use of statistical techniques. Through statistical analysis, Quetelet gained insight into the relationships between crime and other social factors. Among his findings were strong relationships between age and crime, as well as gender and crime. Other influential factors he found included climate, poverty, education, and alcohol consumption, with his research findings published in Of the Development of the Propensity to Crime.[13]

Anthropometry Edit

In his 1835 text on social physics, he presented his theory of human variance around the average, showing human traits were distributed according to a normal curve. The existence of such variation provided the basis for later writers, including Darwin, to argue that natural populations contained sufficient variability for artificial or natural selection to operate.[14]

In terms of influence over later public health agendas, one of Quetelet's lasting legacies was the establishment of a simple measure for classifying people's weight relative to an ideal for their height. His proposal, the body mass index (or Quetelet index), has endured with minor variations to the present day.[15] Anthropometric data is used in modern applications and referenced in the development of every consumer-based product.

Awards and honours Edit

Quetelet was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1839.[1]

The asteroid 1239 Queteleta is named after him. The title of Quetelet professor at Columbia University is awarded in his name.

Publications Edit

  • 1823. Relation d'un voyage fait à la grotte de Han au mois d'août 1822'. 'With M.M. Kickx.
  • 1827. Recherches sur la population, les naissances, les décès, les prisons, les dépôts de mendicité, etc., dans le royaume des Pays-Bas.
  • 1829. Recherches statistiques sur le royaume des Pays-Bas.
  • 1831. The Propensity to Crime.
  • 1834. Astronomie élémentaire.
  • 1835. Sur l'homme et le développement de ses facultés, ou Essai de physique sociale. 2 volumes.
  • 1838. De l'influence des saisons sur la mortalité aux différens âges dans la Belgique.
  • 1839. Catalogue des principales apparitions d'étoiles filantes.
  • 1842. A Treatise on Man and the Development of His Faculties.
  • 1843. Sur l'emploi de la boussole dans les mines.
  • 1845–1851. Sur le climat de la Belgique. 2 volumes.
  • 1848. Du système social et des lois qui le régissent.
  • 1848. Sur la statistique morale et les principes qui doivent en former la base.
  • 1850. Mémoire sur les lois des naissances et de la mortalité à Bruxelles.
  • 1853. Mémoire sur les variations périodiques et non périodiques de la température, d'après les observations faites, pendant vingt ans, à l'observatoire royal de Bruxelles.
  • 1864. Histoire des sciences mathématiques et physiques chez les Belges.
  • 1867. Météorologie de la Belgique comparée à celle du globe.
  • 1867. Sciences mathématiques et physiques au commencement du XIXe siècle.
  • 1869. Sur la physique du globe en Belgique.
  • 1870. Anthropométrie, ou Mesure des différentes facultés de l'homme.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c . London: Royal Society. Archived from the original on 16 March 2015.
  2. ^ Tylor, Edward Burnett (May 1872). "Quetelet on the Science of Man" . Popular Science Monthly. Vol. 1. ISSN 0161-7370 – via Wikisource. [scan  ]
  3. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Adolphe Quetelet", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  4. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  5. ^ a b Grue; Heiberg (2006). "Notes on the History of Normality – Reflections on the Work of Quetelet and Galton". Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research. 8 (4): 232–246. doi:10.1080/15017410600608491.
  6. ^ a b Kubergovic (2013). "Quetelet, Adolphe". Eugenics Archive. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  7. ^ a b Beirne (March 1987). "Adolphe Quetelet and the Origins of Positivist Criminology". American Journal of Sociology. 92 (5): 1140–69. doi:10.1086/228630. JSTOR 2779999. S2CID 144091497.
  8. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  9. ^ "Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet (1796–1874)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  11. ^ Cramer 2002, pp. 3–5.
  12. ^ Jahoda, Gustav (4 September 2015). "Quetelet and the emergence of the behavioral sciences". SpringerPlus. 4 (1): 473. doi:10.1186/s40064-015-1261-7. PMC 4559562. PMID 26361574.
  13. ^ Piers Beirne (1987). "Adolphe Quetelet and the Origins of Positivist Criminology". In; American Journal of Sociology 92(5): pp. 1140–1169.
  14. ^ Eiseley, Loren (1961). Darwin's Century. Anchor Books (Doubleday). p. 227. ISBN 9780385081412.
  15. ^ Garabed Eknoyan (2008). In: Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. 23 (1): 47–51.

Further reading Edit

  • Kevin Donnelly (2015). Adolphe Quetelet, Social Physics and the Average Men of Science, 1796–1874. University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Ian Hacking (1990). The Taming of Chance. Cambridge University Press, chapters 13–15.
  • Alain Desrosières (1998). The Politics of Large Numbers: A History of Statistical Reasoning. Harvard University Press, chapter 3.
  • Stephen Stigler (1999). Statistics on the Table. Harvard University Press, chapter 2.
  • Philip Ball (2005). Critical Mass: How One Thing Leads to Another. Arrow Books 2005, chapter 3.
  • Fabien Locher (2007). "The observatory, the land-based ship and the crusades: earth sciences in european context, 1830–1850", British Journal for History of Science, 40(4), 2007, pp. 491–504 (On the leading role of Adolphe Quetelet in the fields of meteorology and geomagnetism in early nineteenth-century).

adolphe, quetelet, lambert, adolphe, jacques, quetelet, frsf, frse, french, kətlɛ, february, 1796, february, 1874, belgian, astronomer, mathematician, statistician, sociologist, founded, directed, brussels, observatory, influential, introducing, statistical, m. Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet FRSF or FRSE French ketlɛ 22 February 1796 17 February 1874 1 was a Belgian astronomer mathematician statistician and sociologist who founded and directed the Brussels Observatory and was influential in introducing statistical methods to the social sciences His name is sometimes spelled with an accent as Quetelet 2 3 Adolphe QueteletBornLambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet 1796 02 22 22 February 1796Ghent French Republic now Ghent Belgium Died17 February 1874 1874 02 17 aged 77 Brussels BelgiumNationalityBelgianAlma materUniversity of GhentKnown forcontributions to social physicsAwardsForMemRS 1839 1 Scientific careerFieldsastronomermathematicianstatisticiansociologistInstitutionsBrussels ObservatoryHe also founded the science of anthropometry and developed the body mass index BMI scale originally called the Quetelet Index 4 His work on measuring human characteristic to determine the ideal l homme moyen the average man played a key role in the origins of eugenics 5 6 7 Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 2 1 Social physics 2 2 Criminology 2 3 Anthropometry 3 Awards and honours 4 Publications 5 References 6 Further readingBiography EditAdolphe was born in Ghent which at the time was a part of the new French Republic He was the son of Francois Augustin Jacques Henri Quetelet a Frenchman and Anne Francoise Vandervelde a Flemish woman His father was born at Ham Picardy and being of a somewhat adventurous spirit he crossed the English Channel and became both a British citizen and the secretary of a Scottish nobleman In that capacity he traveled with his employer on the Continent particularly spending time in Italy At about 31 he settled in Ghent and was employed by the city where Adolphe was born the fifth of nine children several of whom died in childhood Francois died when Adolphe was only seven years old Adolphe studied at the Ghent Lycee where he afterwards started teaching mathematics in 1815 at the age of 19 In 1819 he moved to the Athenaeum in Brussels and in the same year he completed his dissertation De quibusdam locis geometricis necnon de curva focal Of some new properties of the focal distance and some other curves Quetelet received a doctorate in mathematics in 1819 from the University of Ghent Shortly thereafter the young man set out to convince government officials and private donors to build an astronomical observatory in Brussels he succeeded in 1828 He became a member of the Royal Academy in 1820 He lectured at the museum for sciences and letters and at the Belgian Military School In 1825 he became a correspondent of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands in 1827 he became a member In 1839 he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society 8 From 1841 to 1851 he was a supernumerary associate in the institute and when it became Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences he became foreign member 9 In 1850 he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Quetelet also founded several statistical journals and societies and was especially interested in creating international cooperation among statisticians He encouraged the creation of a statistical section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science BA which later became the Royal Statistical Society of which he became the first overseas member In 1853 he chaired both the International Maritime Conference and the First International Statistical Congress He was a founding member of the first Societe des douze In 1855 Quetelet developed apoplexy which diminished but did not end his scientific activity citation needed He died in Brussels on 17 February 1874 and is buried in the Brussels Cemetery In 1825 he married Cecile Virginie Curtet 10 Work EditHis scientific research encompassed a wide range of different scientific disciplines meteorology astronomy mathematics statistics demography sociology criminology and history of science He made significant contributions to scientific development but he also wrote several monographs directed to the general public He founded the Royal Observatory of Belgium founded or co founded several national and international statistical societies and scientific journals and presided over the first series of the International Statistical Congresses Quetelet was a liberal and an anticlerical but not an atheist or materialist nor a socialist Social physics Edit The new science of probability and statistics was mainly used in astronomy at the time where it was essential to account for measurement errors around means This was done using the method of least squares Quetelet was among the first to apply statistics to social science planning what he called social physics He was keenly aware of the overwhelming complexity of social phenomena and the many variables that needed measurement His goal was to understand the statistical laws underlying such phenomena as crime rates marriage rates or suicide rates He wanted to explain the values of these variables by other social factors These ideas were rather controversial among other scientists at the time who held that it contradicted the concept of freedom of choice His most influential book was Sur l homme et le developpement de ses facultes ou Essai de physique sociale published in 1835 In English translation it is titled Treatise on Man but a literal translation would be On Man and the Development of his Faculties or Essay on Social Physics In it he outlines the project of a social physics and describes his concept of the average man l homme moyen who is characterized by the mean values of measured variables that follow a normal distribution He collected data about many such variables Quetelet wrote about these values as ideals with deviations from them as being less than or more than ideal He saw the average body as an ideal beauty and something to be desired and his work was influential on Francis Galton who coined the term eugenics 5 6 7 Quetelet s student Pierre Francois Verhulst developed the logistic function in the 1830s as a model of population growth see Logistic function History for details 11 When Auguste Comte discovered that Quetelet had appropriated the term social physics which Comte had originally introduced Comte found it necessary to invent the term sociologie sociology because he disagreed with Quetelet s notion that a theory of society could be derived from a collection of statistics Adolphe Quetelet also had a significant influence on Florence Nightingale who shared with him a religious view of statistics which saw understanding statistics as revealing the work of God in addition to statistics being a force of good administration Nightingale met Quetelet in person at the 1860 International Statistical Congress in London and they corresponded for years afterwards 12 Criminology Edit Quetelet was an influential figure in criminology Along with Andre Michel Guerry he helped to establish the cartographic school and positivist schools of criminology which made extensive use of statistical techniques Through statistical analysis Quetelet gained insight into the relationships between crime and other social factors Among his findings were strong relationships between age and crime as well as gender and crime Other influential factors he found included climate poverty education and alcohol consumption with his research findings published in Of the Development of the Propensity to Crime 13 Anthropometry Edit In his 1835 text on social physics he presented his theory of human variance around the average showing human traits were distributed according to a normal curve The existence of such variation provided the basis for later writers including Darwin to argue that natural populations contained sufficient variability for artificial or natural selection to operate 14 In terms of influence over later public health agendas one of Quetelet s lasting legacies was the establishment of a simple measure for classifying people s weight relative to an ideal for their height His proposal the body mass index or Quetelet index has endured with minor variations to the present day 15 Anthropometric data is used in modern applications and referenced in the development of every consumer based product Awards and honours EditQuetelet was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society ForMemRS in 1839 1 The asteroid 1239 Queteleta is named after him The title of Quetelet professor at Columbia University is awarded in his name Publications Edit1823 Relation d un voyage fait a la grotte de Han au mois d aout 1822 With M M Kickx 1827 Recherches sur la population les naissances les deces les prisons les depots de mendicite etc dans le royaume des Pays Bas 1829 Recherches statistiques sur le royaume des Pays Bas 1831 The Propensity to Crime 1834 Astronomie elementaire 1835 Sur l homme et le developpement de ses facultes ou Essai de physique sociale 2 volumes 1838 De l influence des saisons sur la mortalite aux differens ages dans la Belgique 1839 Catalogue des principales apparitions d etoiles filantes 1842 A Treatise on Man and the Development of His Faculties 1843 Sur l emploi de la boussole dans les mines 1845 1851 Sur le climat de la Belgique 2 volumes 1848 Du systeme social et des lois qui le regissent 1848 Sur la statistique morale et les principes qui doivent en former la base 1850 Memoire sur les lois des naissances et de la mortalite a Bruxelles 1853 Memoire sur les variations periodiques et non periodiques de la temperature d apres les observations faites pendant vingt ans a l observatoire royal de Bruxelles 1864 Histoire des sciences mathematiques et physiques chez les Belges 1867 Meteorologie de la Belgique comparee a celle du globe 1867 Sciences mathematiques et physiques au commencement du XIXe siecle 1869 Sur la physique du globe en Belgique 1870 Anthropometrie ou Mesure des differentes facultes de l homme References Edit a b c Fellows of the Royal Society London Royal Society Archived from the original on 16 March 2015 Tylor Edward Burnett May 1872 Quetelet on the Science of Man Popular Science Monthly Vol 1 ISSN 0161 7370 via Wikisource scan nbsp O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Adolphe Quetelet MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2018 a b Grue Heiberg 2006 Notes on the History of Normality Reflections on the Work of Quetelet and Galton Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research 8 4 232 246 doi 10 1080 15017410600608491 a b Kubergovic 2013 Quetelet Adolphe Eugenics Archive Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b Beirne March 1987 Adolphe Quetelet and the Origins of Positivist Criminology American Journal of Sociology 92 5 1140 69 doi 10 1086 228630 JSTOR 2779999 S2CID 144091497 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 9 April 2021 Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet 1796 1874 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 20 July 2015 Cecile Virginie Curtet 1801 1858 Magnum Opus Genealogie Online Archived from the original on 15 June 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2018 Cramer 2002 pp 3 5 Jahoda Gustav 4 September 2015 Quetelet and the emergence of the behavioral sciences SpringerPlus 4 1 473 doi 10 1186 s40064 015 1261 7 PMC 4559562 PMID 26361574 Piers Beirne 1987 Adolphe Quetelet and the Origins of Positivist Criminology In American Journal of Sociology 92 5 pp 1140 1169 Eiseley Loren 1961 Darwin s Century Anchor Books Doubleday p 227 ISBN 9780385081412 Garabed Eknoyan 2008 Adolphe Quetelet 1796 1874 the average man and indices of obesity In Nephrol Dial Transplant 23 1 47 51 Further reading Edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Adolphe Quetelet nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Adolphe Quetelet nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adolphe Quetelet Kevin Donnelly 2015 Adolphe Quetelet Social Physics and the Average Men of Science 1796 1874 University of Pittsburgh Press Ian Hacking 1990 The Taming of Chance Cambridge University Press chapters 13 15 Alain Desrosieres 1998 The Politics of Large Numbers A History of Statistical Reasoning Harvard University Press chapter 3 Stephen Stigler 1999 Statistics on the Table Harvard University Press chapter 2 Philip Ball 2005 Critical Mass How One Thing Leads to Another Arrow Books 2005 chapter 3 Fabien Locher 2007 The observatory the land based ship and the crusades earth sciences in european context 1830 1850 British Journal for History of Science 40 4 2007 pp 491 504 On the leading role of Adolphe Quetelet in the fields of meteorology and geomagnetism in early nineteenth century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adolphe Quetelet amp oldid 1179845737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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