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Harmonices Mundi

Harmonice Mundi (Harmonices mundi libri V)[1] (Latin: The Harmony of the World, 1619) is a book by Johannes Kepler. In the work, written entirely in Latin, Kepler discusses harmony and congruence in geometrical forms and physical phenomena. The final section of the work relates his discovery of the so-called "third law of planetary motion".[2]

Harmonice Mundi
1619 first edition
AuthorJohannes Kepler
LanguageLatin
SubjectAstronomy, Music
PublisherLinz
Publication date
1619

Background and history edit

Kepler began working on Harmonice Mundi sometime near 1599, which was the year Kepler sent a letter to Michael Maestlin detailing the mathematical data and proofs that he intended to use for his upcoming text, which he originally planned to name De harmonia mundi. Kepler was aware that the content of Harmonice Mundi closely resembled that of the subject matter for Ptolemy's Harmonica, but was not concerned. The new astronomy Kepler would use (most notably the adoption of elliptic orbits in the Copernican system) allowed him to explore new theorems. Another important development that allowed Kepler to establish his celestial-harmonic relationships, was the abandonment of the Pythagorean tuning as the basis for musical consonance and the adoption of geometrically supported musical ratios; this would eventually be what allowed Kepler to relate musical consonance and the angular velocities of the planets. Thus, Kepler could reason that his relationships gave evidence for God acting as a grand geometer, rather than a Pythagorean numerologist.[3]

The concept of musical harmonies intrinsically existing within the spacing of the planets existed in medieval philosophy prior to Kepler. Musica universalis was a traditional philosophical metaphor that was taught in the quadrivium, and was often called the "music of the spheres." Kepler was intrigued by this idea while he sought explanation for a rational arrangement of the heavenly bodies.[4] When Kepler uses the term "harmony" it is not strictly referring to the musical definition, but rather a broader definition encompassing congruence in Nature and the workings of both the celestial and terrestrial bodies. He notes musical harmony as being a product of man, derived from angles, in contrast to a harmony that he refers to as being a phenomenon that interacts with the human soul. In turn, this allowed Kepler to claim the Earth has a soul because it is subjected to astrological harmony.[3]

While writing the book, Kepler had to defend his mother in court after she had been accused of witchcraft.[5]

Content edit

Kepler divides The Harmony of the World into five long chapters: the first is on regular polygons; the second is on the congruence of figures; the third is on the origin of harmonic proportions in music; the fourth is on harmonic configurations in astrology; the fifth is on the harmony of the motions of the planets.[6]

 
Small stellated dodecahedron
 
Great stellated dodecahedron

Chapter 1 and 2 edit

Chapters 1 and 2 of The Harmony of the World contain most of Kepler's contributions concerning polyhedra. He is primarily interested with how polygons, which he defines as either regular or semiregular, can come to be fixed together around a central point on a plane to form congruence. His primary objective was to be able to rank polygons based on a measure of sociability, or rather, their ability to form partial congruence when combined with other polyhedra. He returns to this concept later in Harmonice Mundi with relation to astronomical explanations. In the second chapter is the earliest mathematical understanding of two types of regular star polyhedra, the small and great stellated dodecahedron; they would later be called Kepler's solids or Kepler Polyhedra and, together with two regular polyhedra discovered by Louis Poinsot, as the Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra.[7] He describes polyhedra in terms of their faces, which is similar to the model used in Plato's Timaeus to describe the formation of Platonic solids in terms of basic triangles.[3] The book features illustrations of solids and tiling patterns, some of which are related to the golden ratio.[8]

While medieval philosophers spoke metaphorically of the "music of the spheres", Kepler discovered physical harmonies in planetary motion. He found that the difference between the maximum and minimum angular speeds of a planet in its orbit approximates a harmonic proportion. For instance, the maximum angular speed of the Earth as measured from the Sun varies by a semitone (a ratio of 16:15), from mi to fa, between aphelion and perihelion. Venus only varies by a tiny 25:24 interval (called a diesis in musical terms).[6] Kepler explains the reason for the Earth's small harmonic range:

The Earth sings Mi, Fa, Mi: you may infer even from the syllables that in this our home misery and famine hold sway.[9]

The celestial choir Kepler formed was made up of a tenor (Mars), two bass (Saturn and Jupiter), a soprano (Mercury), and two altos (Venus and Earth). Mercury, with its large elliptical orbit, was determined to be able to produce the greatest number of notes, while Venus was found to be capable of only a single note because its orbit is nearly a circle.[6][10] At very rare intervals all of the planets would sing together in "perfect concord": Kepler proposed that this may have happened only once in history, perhaps at the time of creation.[11] Kepler reminds us that harmonic order is only mimicked by man, but has origin in the alignment of the heavenly bodies:

Accordingly you won't wonder any more that a very excellent order of sounds or pitches in a musical system or scale has been set up by men, since you see that they are doing nothing else in this business except to play the apes of God the Creator and to act out, as it were, a certain drama of the ordination of the celestial movements.

— Book V[6]

Kepler discovers that all but one of the ratios of the maximum and minimum speeds of planets on neighboring orbits approximate musical harmonies within a margin of error of less than a diesis (a 25:24 interval). The orbits of Mars and Jupiter produce the one exception to this rule, creating the inharmonic ratio of 18:19.[6]

Chapter 5 edit

Chapter 5 includes a long digression on astrology. This is immediately followed by Kepler's third law of planetary motion, which shows a constant proportionality between the cube of the semi-major axis of a planet's orbit and the square of the time of its orbital period.[9] Kepler's previous book, Astronomia nova, related the discovery of the first two principles now known as Kepler's laws.

Recent history edit

A copy of the 1619 edition was stolen from the National Library of Sweden in the 1990s.[12]

Use in recent music edit

A small number of recent compositions either make reference to or are based on the concepts of Harmonice Mundi or Harmony of the Spheres. The most notable of these are:

  • Laurie Spiegel: Kepler's Harmony of the Worlds (1977). An excerpt of the piece was selected by Carl Sagan for inclusion on the Voyager Golden Record, launched aboard the Voyager spacecraft.[13]
  • Mike Oldfield, (English musician and composer, born 1953), Music of the Spheres (album released in 2008 by Mercury Records).[14]
  • Joep Franssens (Dutch composer, born 1955), Harmony of the Spheres (cycle in five movements for mixed choir and string orchestra), composed 2001.[15]
  • Philip Glass, American composer, Kepler (opera) (2009), homage to Johannes Kepler, commissioned by the city of Linz, where the astronomer lived.
  • Tim Watts, (English composer, born 1979), Kepler's Trial (2016–2017), premiered at St John's College, Cambridge (2016); revised version performed at the Victoria and Albert Museum, 9 November 2017[16]
  • Paul Hindemith, German composer Die Harmonie der Welt Symphony (originally entitled Symphonie „Die Harmonie der Welt“ in German), IPH 50, is a symphony composed in 1951, and which served as the basis for the 1957 opera Die Harmonie der Welt.
  • Miriam Monaghan (British recorder player and composer)[17] Kepler’s Planets (2019), written for Palisander Recorder Quartet. Extracts were premiered live on BBC Radio 3 In Tune (October 2019)[18] with full concert premiere at London International Festival of Early Music (November 2019).
  • Dave Soldier, American composer, wrote Motet: Harmony of the World (2022), closely hewing to Kepler's instructions in the book for a future composer to write a motet, including the use a specific 6 voice choir (recorded by the microtonal choir, Ekmeles), the particular just intonation intervals, and the harmonies allowed in Kepler's diagrams. The text sets the Prayer to the Sun by Proclus in ancient Greek, a poet heavily quoted in Kepler's text.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The full title is Ioannis Keppleri Harmonices mundi libri V (The Five Books of Johannes Kepler's The Harmony of the World).
  2. ^ Johannes Kepler, Harmonice Mundi [The Harmony of the World] (Linz, (Austria): Johann Planck, 1619), p. 189. From the bottom of p. 189: "Sed res est certissima extactissimaque quod proportio qua est inter binorum quorumcunque Planetarum tempora periodica, sit præcise sesquialtera proportionis mediarum distantiarum, id est Orbium ipsorum; ..." (But it is absolutely certain and exact that the proportion between the periodic times of any two planets is precisely the sesquialternate proportion [i.e., the ratio of 3:2] of their mean distances, that is, of the actual spheres, ..."
    An English translation of Kepler's Harmonice Mundi is available as: Johannes Kepler with E. J. Aiton, A. M. Duncan, and J. V. Field, trans., The Harmony of the World (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: American Philosophical Society, 1997); see especially p. 411.
  3. ^ a b c Field, J. V. (1984). A Lutheran astrologer: Johannes Kepler. Archive for History of Exact Sciences, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 207–219.
  4. ^ Voelkel, J. R. (1995). The music of the heavens: Kepler's harmonic astronomy. 1994. Physics Today, 48(6), 59–60.
  5. ^ Gillispie, Charles Coulston (1960). The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas. Princeton University Press. pp. 33–37. ISBN 0-691-02350-6.
  6. ^ a b c d e Brackenridge, J. (1982). Kepler, elliptical orbits, and celestial circularity: A study in the persistence of metaphysical commitment part II. Annals of Science, 39(3), 265.
  7. ^ Cromwell, P. R. (1995). Kepler's work on polyhedra. Mathematical Intelligencer, 17(3), 23.
  8. ^ Livio, Mario (2002). The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, The World's Most Astonishing Number. New York: Broadway Books. pp. 154–156. ISBN 0-7679-0815-5.
  9. ^ a b Schoot, A. (2001). Kepler's search for form and proportion. Renaissance Studies: Journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies, 15(1), 65–66.
  10. ^ The opening of the film Mars et Avril, by Martin Villeneuve, is based on Kepler's cosmological model in Harmonice Mundi, in which the harmony of the universe is determined by the motion of celestial bodies. Benoît Charest also composed the score according to this theory. This opening sequence can be seen here: https://vimeo.com/66697472
  11. ^ Walker, D. P. (1964). Kepler’s celestial music. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol. 30, pp. 249.
  12. ^ "Books stolen from the National Library of Sweden between the years 1995–2004". National Library of Sweden. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  13. ^ Gagné, Nicole V. (2012). Historical dictionary of modern and contemporary classical music. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6765-9. OCLC 729863298.
  14. ^ Music of the Spheres
  15. ^ Dutch Composers (21 November 2012). "Joep Franssens – Harmony of the Spheres". Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  16. ^ "At the V&A: Tim Watts' Musically and Dramatically Compelling Kepler's Trial". Seen and Heard International. 11 November 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  17. ^ "Miriam". palisanderrecorders. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  18. ^ "BBC Radio 3 - In Tune, Rachel Podger, Palisander". BBC. Retrieved 18 March 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Johannes Kepler, The Harmony of the World. Tr. Charles Glenn Wallis. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952.
  • "Johannes Kepler," in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers, 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2.

External links edit

  • Harmonice mundi ("The Harmony of the Worlds") in fulltext facsimile; Carnegie-Mellon University
  • Harmonice Mundi at Archive.org
  • Harmonies of the World excerpt from Harmonice Mundi translated by Charles Glenn Wallis

harmonices, mundi, harmony, worlds, redirects, here, episode, cosmos, personal, voyage, cosmos, personal, voyage, episodes, harmonice, mundi, harmonices, mundi, libri, latin, harmony, world, 1619, book, johannes, kepler, work, written, entirely, latin, kepler,. Harmony of the Worlds redirects here For the episode of Cosmos A Personal Voyage see Cosmos A Personal Voyage Episodes Harmonice Mundi Harmonices mundi libri V 1 Latin The Harmony of the World 1619 is a book by Johannes Kepler In the work written entirely in Latin Kepler discusses harmony and congruence in geometrical forms and physical phenomena The final section of the work relates his discovery of the so called third law of planetary motion 2 Harmonice Mundi1619 first editionAuthorJohannes KeplerLanguageLatinSubjectAstronomy MusicPublisherLinzPublication date1619 Contents 1 Background and history 2 Content 2 1 Chapter 1 and 2 2 2 Chapter 5 3 Recent history 4 Use in recent music 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground and history editKepler began working on Harmonice Mundi sometime near 1599 which was the year Kepler sent a letter to Michael Maestlin detailing the mathematical data and proofs that he intended to use for his upcoming text which he originally planned to name De harmonia mundi Kepler was aware that the content of Harmonice Mundi closely resembled that of the subject matter for Ptolemy s Harmonica but was not concerned The new astronomy Kepler would use most notably the adoption of elliptic orbits in the Copernican system allowed him to explore new theorems Another important development that allowed Kepler to establish his celestial harmonic relationships was the abandonment of the Pythagorean tuning as the basis for musical consonance and the adoption of geometrically supported musical ratios this would eventually be what allowed Kepler to relate musical consonance and the angular velocities of the planets Thus Kepler could reason that his relationships gave evidence for God acting as a grand geometer rather than a Pythagorean numerologist 3 The concept of musical harmonies intrinsically existing within the spacing of the planets existed in medieval philosophy prior to Kepler Musica universalis was a traditional philosophical metaphor that was taught in the quadrivium and was often called the music of the spheres Kepler was intrigued by this idea while he sought explanation for a rational arrangement of the heavenly bodies 4 When Kepler uses the term harmony it is not strictly referring to the musical definition but rather a broader definition encompassing congruence in Nature and the workings of both the celestial and terrestrial bodies He notes musical harmony as being a product of man derived from angles in contrast to a harmony that he refers to as being a phenomenon that interacts with the human soul In turn this allowed Kepler to claim the Earth has a soul because it is subjected to astrological harmony 3 While writing the book Kepler had to defend his mother in court after she had been accused of witchcraft 5 Content editKepler divides The Harmony of the World into five long chapters the first is on regular polygons the second is on the congruence of figures the third is on the origin of harmonic proportions in music the fourth is on harmonic configurations in astrology the fifth is on the harmony of the motions of the planets 6 nbsp Small stellated dodecahedron nbsp Great stellated dodecahedronChapter 1 and 2 edit Chapters 1 and 2 of The Harmony of the World contain most of Kepler s contributions concerning polyhedra He is primarily interested with how polygons which he defines as either regular or semiregular can come to be fixed together around a central point on a plane to form congruence His primary objective was to be able to rank polygons based on a measure of sociability or rather their ability to form partial congruence when combined with other polyhedra He returns to this concept later in Harmonice Mundi with relation to astronomical explanations In the second chapter is the earliest mathematical understanding of two types of regular star polyhedra the small and great stellated dodecahedron they would later be called Kepler s solids or Kepler Polyhedra and together with two regular polyhedra discovered by Louis Poinsot as the Kepler Poinsot polyhedra 7 He describes polyhedra in terms of their faces which is similar to the model used in Plato s Timaeus to describe the formation of Platonic solids in terms of basic triangles 3 The book features illustrations of solids and tiling patterns some of which are related to the golden ratio 8 While medieval philosophers spoke metaphorically of the music of the spheres Kepler discovered physical harmonies in planetary motion He found that the difference between the maximum and minimum angular speeds of a planet in its orbit approximates a harmonic proportion For instance the maximum angular speed of the Earth as measured from the Sun varies by a semitone a ratio of 16 15 from mi to fa between aphelion and perihelion Venus only varies by a tiny 25 24 interval called a diesis in musical terms 6 Kepler explains the reason for the Earth s small harmonic range The Earth sings Mi Fa Mi you may infer even from the syllables that in this our home misery and famine hold sway 9 The celestial choir Kepler formed was made up of a tenor Mars two bass Saturn and Jupiter a soprano Mercury and two altos Venus and Earth Mercury with its large elliptical orbit was determined to be able to produce the greatest number of notes while Venus was found to be capable of only a single note because its orbit is nearly a circle 6 10 At very rare intervals all of the planets would sing together in perfect concord Kepler proposed that this may have happened only once in history perhaps at the time of creation 11 Kepler reminds us that harmonic order is only mimicked by man but has origin in the alignment of the heavenly bodies Accordingly you won t wonder any more that a very excellent order of sounds or pitches in a musical system or scale has been set up by men since you see that they are doing nothing else in this business except to play the apes of God the Creator and to act out as it were a certain drama of the ordination of the celestial movements Book V 6 Kepler discovers that all but one of the ratios of the maximum and minimum speeds of planets on neighboring orbits approximate musical harmonies within a margin of error of less than a diesis a 25 24 interval The orbits of Mars and Jupiter produce the one exception to this rule creating the inharmonic ratio of 18 19 6 Chapter 5 edit Chapter 5 includes a long digression on astrology This is immediately followed by Kepler s third law of planetary motion which shows a constant proportionality between the cube of the semi major axis of a planet s orbit and the square of the time of its orbital period 9 Kepler s previous book Astronomia nova related the discovery of the first two principles now known as Kepler s laws Recent history editA copy of the 1619 edition was stolen from the National Library of Sweden in the 1990s 12 Use in recent music editA small number of recent compositions either make reference to or are based on the concepts of Harmonice Mundi or Harmony of the Spheres The most notable of these are Laurie Spiegel Kepler s Harmony of the Worlds 1977 An excerpt of the piece was selected by Carl Sagan for inclusion on the Voyager Golden Record launched aboard the Voyager spacecraft 13 Mike Oldfield English musician and composer born 1953 Music of the Spheres album released in 2008 by Mercury Records 14 Joep Franssens Dutch composer born 1955 Harmony of the Spheres cycle in five movements for mixed choir and string orchestra composed 2001 15 Philip Glass American composer Kepler opera 2009 homage to Johannes Kepler commissioned by the city of Linz where the astronomer lived Tim Watts English composer born 1979 Kepler s Trial 2016 2017 premiered at St John s College Cambridge 2016 revised version performed at the Victoria and Albert Museum 9 November 2017 16 Paul Hindemith German composer Die Harmonie der Welt Symphony originally entitled Symphonie Die Harmonie der Welt in German IPH 50 is a symphony composed in 1951 and which served as the basis for the 1957 opera Die Harmonie der Welt Miriam Monaghan British recorder player and composer 17 Kepler s Planets 2019 written for Palisander Recorder Quartet Extracts were premiered live on BBC Radio 3 In Tune October 2019 18 with full concert premiere at London International Festival of Early Music November 2019 Dave Soldier American composer wrote Motet Harmony of the World 2022 closely hewing to Kepler s instructions in the book for a future composer to write a motet including the use a specific 6 voice choir recorded by the microtonal choir Ekmeles the particular just intonation intervals and the harmonies allowed in Kepler s diagrams The text sets the Prayer to the Sun by Proclus in ancient Greek a poet heavily quoted in Kepler s text See also editPythagoreanism Musica universalis Mysterium CosmographicumReferences edit The full title is Ioannis Keppleri Harmonices mundi libri V The Five Books of Johannes Kepler s The Harmony of the World Johannes Kepler Harmonice Mundi The Harmony of the World Linz Austria Johann Planck 1619 p 189 From the bottom of p 189 Sed res est certissima extactissimaque quodproportio qua est inter binorum quorumcunque Planetarum tempora periodica sit praecise sesquialtera proportionismediarum distantiarum id estOrbiumipsorum But it is absolutely certain and exact that the proportion between the periodic times of any two planets is precisely the sesquialternate proportion i e the ratio of 3 2 of their mean distances that is of the actual spheres An English translation of Kepler s Harmonice Mundi is available as Johannes Kepler with E J Aiton A M Duncan and J V Field trans The Harmony of the World Philadelphia Pennsylvania American Philosophical Society 1997 see especially p 411 a b c Field J V 1984 A Lutheran astrologer Johannes Kepler Archive for History of Exact Sciences Vol 31 No 3 pp 207 219 Voelkel J R 1995 The music of the heavens Kepler s harmonic astronomy 1994 Physics Today 48 6 59 60 Gillispie Charles Coulston 1960 The Edge of Objectivity An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas Princeton University Press pp 33 37 ISBN 0 691 02350 6 a b c d e Brackenridge J 1982 Kepler elliptical orbits and celestial circularity A study in the persistence of metaphysical commitment part II Annals of Science 39 3 265 Cromwell P R 1995 Kepler s work on polyhedra Mathematical Intelligencer 17 3 23 Livio Mario 2002 The Golden Ratio The Story of Phi The World s Most Astonishing Number New York Broadway Books pp 154 156 ISBN 0 7679 0815 5 a b Schoot A 2001 Kepler s search for form and proportion Renaissance Studies Journal of the Society for Renaissance Studies 15 1 65 66 The opening of the film Mars et Avril by Martin Villeneuve is based on Kepler s cosmological model in Harmonice Mundi in which the harmony of the universe is determined by the motion of celestial bodies Benoit Charest also composed the score according to this theory This opening sequence can be seen here https vimeo com 66697472 Walker D P 1964 Kepler s celestial music Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Vol 30 pp 249 Books stolen from the National Library of Sweden between the years 1995 2004 National Library of Sweden Retrieved 19 August 2016 Gagne Nicole V 2012 Historical dictionary of modern and contemporary classical music Lanham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6765 9 OCLC 729863298 Music of the Spheres Dutch Composers 21 November 2012 Joep Franssens Harmony of the Spheres Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 via YouTube At the V amp A Tim Watts Musically and Dramatically Compelling Kepler s Trial Seen and Heard International 11 November 2017 Retrieved 23 March 2018 Miriam palisanderrecorders Retrieved 18 March 2022 BBC Radio 3 In Tune Rachel Podger Palisander BBC Retrieved 18 March 2022 Further reading editJohannes Kepler The Harmony of the World Tr Charles Glenn Wallis Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 1952 Johannes Kepler in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Ed Stanley Sadie 20 vol London Macmillan Publishers 1980 ISBN 1 56159 174 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harmonices Mundi Harmonice mundi The Harmony of the Worlds in fulltext facsimile Carnegie Mellon University Harmonice Mundi at Archive org Harmonies of the World excerpt from Harmonice Mundi translated by Charles Glenn Wallis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harmonices Mundi amp oldid 1177931640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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