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Jean le Rond d'Alembert

Jean-Baptiste le Rond d'Alembert[1] (/dæləmˈbɛər/;[2] French: [ʒɑ̃ batist lə ʁɔ̃ dalɑ̃bɛːʁ]; 16 November 1717 – 29 October 1783) was a French mathematician, mechanician, physicist, philosopher, and music theorist. Until 1759 he was, together with Denis Diderot, a co-editor of the Encyclopédie.[3] D'Alembert's formula for obtaining solutions to the wave equation is named after him.[4][5][6] The wave equation is sometimes referred to as d'Alembert's equation, and the fundamental theorem of algebra is named after d'Alembert in French.

Early years

Born in Paris, d'Alembert was the natural son of the writer Claudine Guérin de Tencin and the chevalier Louis-Camus Destouches, an artillery officer. Destouches was abroad at the time of d'Alembert's birth. Days after birth his mother left him on the steps of the Saint-Jean-le-Rond de Paris [fr] church. According to custom, he was named after the patron saint of the church. D'Alembert was placed in an orphanage for foundling children, but his father found him and placed him with the wife of a glazier, Madame Rousseau, with whom he lived for nearly 50 years.[7] She gave him little encouragement. When he told her of some discovery he had made or something he had written she generally replied,

You will never be anything but a philosopher—and what is that but an ass who plagues himself all his life, that he may be talked about after he is dead.[8]

Destouches secretly paid for the education of Jean le Rond, but did not want his paternity officially recognised.

Studies and adult life

D'Alembert first attended a private school. The chevalier Destouches left d'Alembert an annuity of 1,200 livres on his death in 1726. Under the influence of the Destouches family, at the age of 12 d'Alembert entered the Jansenist Collège des Quatre-Nations (the institution was also known under the name "Collège Mazarin"). Here he studied philosophy, law, and the arts, graduating as baccalauréat en arts in 1735.

In his later life, d'Alembert scorned the Cartesian principles he had been taught by the Jansenists: "physical promotion, innate ideas and the vortices". The Jansenists steered d'Alembert toward an ecclesiastical career, attempting to deter him from pursuits such as poetry and mathematics. Theology was, however, "rather unsubstantial fodder" for d'Alembert. He entered law school for two years, and was nominated avocat in 1738.

He was also interested in medicine and mathematics. Jean enrolled first as Jean-Baptiste Daremberg and subsequently changed his name, perhaps for reasons of euphony, to d’Alembert.[citation needed]

Later, in recognition of d'Alembert's achievements, Frederick the Great of Prussia proposed the name "d'Alembert" for a suspected (but non-existent) moon of Venus, however d'Alembert refused the honor.[9]

Career

 
Nouvelles expériences sur la résistance des fluides
 
Front page of a 1758 copy of Traité de dynamique

In July 1739 he made his first contribution to the field of mathematics, pointing out the errors he had detected in Analyse démontrée (published 1708 by Charles-René Reynaud) in a communication addressed to the Académie des Sciences. At the time L'analyse démontrée was a standard work, which d'Alembert himself had used to study the foundations of mathematics. D'Alembert was also a Latin scholar of some note and worked in the latter part of his life on a translation of Tacitus, for which he received wide praise including that of Denis Diderot.

In 1740, he submitted his second scientific work from the field of fluid mechanics Mémoire sur la réfraction des corps solides, which was recognised by Clairaut. In this work d'Alembert theoretically explained refraction.

In 1741, after several failed attempts, d'Alembert was elected into the Académie des Sciences. He was later elected to the Berlin Academy in 1746[10] and a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1748.[11]

In 1743, he published his most famous work, Traité de dynamique, in which he developed his own laws of motion.[12]

When the Encyclopédie was organised in the late 1740s, d'Alembert was engaged as co-editor (for mathematics and science) with Diderot, and served until a series of crises temporarily interrupted the publication in 1757. He authored over a thousand articles for it, including the famous Preliminary Discourse. D'Alembert "abandoned the foundation of Materialism"[13] when he "doubted whether there exists outside us anything corresponding to what we suppose we see."[13] In this way, d'Alembert agreed with the Idealist Berkeley and anticipated the transcendental idealism of Kant.[citation needed]

In 1752, he wrote about what is now called D'Alembert's paradox: that the drag on a body immersed in an inviscid, incompressible fluid is zero.

In 1754, d'Alembert was elected a member of the Académie des sciences, of which he became Permanent Secretary on 9 April 1772.[14]

In 1757, an article by d'Alembert in the seventh volume of the Encyclopedia suggested that the Geneva clergymen had moved from Calvinism to pure Socinianism, basing this on information provided by Voltaire. The Pastors of Geneva were indignant, and appointed a committee to answer these charges. Under pressure from Jacob Vernes, Jean-Jacques Rousseau and others, d'Alembert eventually made the excuse that he considered anyone who did not accept the Church of Rome to be a Socinianist, and that was all he meant, and he abstained from further work on the encyclopaedia following his response to the critique.[15]

He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1781.[16]

Music theories

D'Alembert's first exposure to music theory was in 1749 when he was called upon to review a Mémoire submitted to the Académie by Jean-Philippe Rameau. This article, written in conjunction with Diderot, would later form the basis of Rameau's 1750 treatise Démonstration du principe de l'harmonie. D'Alembert wrote a glowing review praising the author's deductive character as an ideal scientific model. He saw in Rameau's music theories support for his own scientific ideas, a fully systematic method with a strongly deductive synthetic structure.

Two years later, in 1752, d'Alembert attempted a fully comprehensive survey of Rameau's works in his Eléments de musique théorique et pratique suivant les principes de M. Rameau.[17] Emphasizing Rameau's main claim that music was a mathematical science that had a single principle from which could be deduced all the elements and rules of musical practice as well as the explicit Cartesian methodology employed, d'Alembert helped to popularise the work of the composer and advertise his own theories.[17] He claims to have "clarified, developed, and simplified" the principles of Rameau, arguing that the single idea of the corps sonore [fr] was not sufficient to derive the entirety of music.[18] D'Alembert instead claimed that three principles would be necessary to generate the major musical mode, the minor mode, and the identity of octaves. Because he was not a musician, however, d'Alembert misconstrued the finer points of Rameau's thinking, changing and removing concepts that would not fit neatly into his understanding of music.

Although initially grateful, Rameau eventually turned on d'Alembert while voicing his increasing dissatisfaction with J. J. Rousseau's Encyclopédie articles on music.[19] This led to a series of bitter exchanges between the men and contributed to the end of d'Alembert and Rameau's friendship. A long preliminary discourse d'Alembert wrote for the 1762 edition of his Elémens attempted to summarise the dispute and act as a final rebuttal.

D'Alembert also discussed various aspects of the state of music in his celebrated Discours préliminaire of Diderot's Encyclopédie. D'Alembert claims that, compared to the other arts, music, "which speaks simultaneously to the imagination and the senses," has not been able to represent or imitate as much of reality because of the "lack of sufficient inventiveness and resourcefulness of those who cultivate it."[20] He wanted musical expression to deal with all physical sensations rather than merely the passions alone. D'Alembert believed that modern (Baroque) music had only achieved perfection in his age, as there existed no classical Greek models to study and imitate. He claimed that "time destroyed all models which the ancients may have left us in this genre."[21] He praises Rameau as "that manly, courageous, and fruitful genius" who picked up the slack left by Jean-Baptiste Lully in the French musical arts.[22]

 
Portrait of Jean Le Rond d'Alembert, 1777, by Catherine Lusurier.

Personal life

D'Alembert was a participant in several Parisian salons, particularly those of Marie Thérèse Rodet Geoffrin, of the marquise du Deffand and of Julie de Lespinasse. D'Alembert became infatuated with Julie de Lespinasse, and eventually took up residence with her.

Death

He suffered bad health for many years and his death was as the result of a urinary bladder illness. As a known unbeliever,[23][24][25] D'Alembert was buried in a common unmarked grave.

Legacy

In France, the fundamental theorem of algebra is known as the d'Alembert/Gauss theorem, as an error in d'Alembert's proof was caught by Gauss.

He also created his ratio test, a test to determine if a series converges.

The D'Alembert operator, which first arose in D'Alembert's analysis of vibrating strings, plays an important role in modern theoretical physics.

While he made great strides in mathematics and physics, d'Alembert is also famously known for incorrectly arguing in Croix ou Pile that the probability of a coin landing heads increased for every time that it came up tails. In gambling, the strategy of decreasing one's bet the more one wins and increasing one's bet the more one loses is therefore called the D'Alembert system, a type of martingale.

In South Australia, a small inshore island in south-western Spencer Gulf was named Ile d'Alembert by the French explorer, Nicolas Baudin during his expedition to New Holland. The island is better known by the alternative English name of Lipson Island. The island is a conservation park and seabird rookery.

Fictional portrayal

Diderot portrayed d'Alembert in Le rêve de D'Alembert (D'Alembert's Dream), written after the two men had become estranged. It depicts d'Alembert ill in bed, conducting a debate on materialist philosophy in his sleep.

D'Alembert's Principle, a 1996 novel by Andrew Crumey, takes its title from D'Alembert's principle in physics. Its first part describes d'Alembert's life and his infatuation with Julie de Lespinasse.

List of works

  • D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1743). Traité de dynamique (2nd ed.). Gabay (1990 reprint).
  • D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1747a). "Recherches sur la courbe que forme une corde tenduë mise en vibration (Researches on the curve that a tense cord forms [when] set into vibration)". Histoire de l'académie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin. Vol. 3. pp. 214–219.
  • D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1747b). "Suite des recherches sur la courbe que forme une corde tenduë mise en vibration (Further researches on the curve that a tense cord forms [when] set into vibration)". Histoire de l'académie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin. Vol. 3. pp. 220–249.
  • D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1750). "Addition au mémoire sur la courbe que forme une corde tenduë mise en vibration". Histoire de l'académie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin. Vol. 6. pp. 355–60.
  • Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Michel Antoine David. 1754.
    • Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Michel Antoine David. 1754.
    • Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde (in French). Vol. 3. Paris: Michel Antoine David. 1756.
  • D'Alembert, Jean Le Rond (1995). Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot. Translated by Schwab, Richard N.; Rex, Walter E. University of Chicago Press.
  • Traité de dynamique (in French). Paris: Jean-Baptiste Coignard (3.). 1743.
  • Mémoire sur le calcul intégral (1739), prima opera pubblicata
  • Traité de l'équilibre et du mouvement des fluides (1744)
  • Réflexions sur la cause générale des vents (1746)
  • Recherches sur les cordes vibrantes (1747)
  • Recherches sur la précession des equinoxes, et sur la mutation de l'axe de la terre, dans le systême newtonien. A Paris: Jean Baptiste Coignard. 1749.
  • Éléments de musique, théorique et pratique. Lyon: Jombert, Charles Antoine; Bruyset, Jean-Marie (1.). 1759.
  • Essai d'une nouvelle théorie de la résistance des fluides[permanent dead link] (1752)
  • Essai sur les éléments de philosophie (1759)
  • Nouvelles expériences sur la résistance des fluides (in French). Paris: Jean François Louis Chardon. 1777.
  • Éloges lus dans les séances publiques de l'Académie française (1779)
  • Opuscules mathématiques[permanent dead link] (8 tomi 1761-1780)
  • Œuvres complètes, Éditions CNRS, 2002. ISBN 2-271-06013-3
  • Encyclopédie ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers, Flammarion, 1993. ISBN 2-08-070426-5
  • Nouvelles expériences sur la résistance des fluides, par mm. D'Alembert ... & l'Abbé Bossut ... A Paris: rue Dauphine, chez Claude-Antoine Jombert, fils ainé, libraire du Roi pour le Génie & l'Artillerie. 1777.
  • Mélanges de littérature, de philosophie et d'histoire. London: printed for C. Henderson : and sold by T. Becket and P. A. De Hondt, in the Strand. 1764.
  • [Opere] (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: A. Belin. 1821.
    • [Opere] (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: A. Belin. 1821.
    • [Opere] (in French). Vol. 3. Paris: A. Belin. 1821.
    • [Opere] (in French). Vol. 4. Paris: A. Belin. 1822.
    • [Opere] (in French). Vol. 5. Paris: A. Belin. 1822.
    • Oeuvres et correspondances inedites (in French). Paris: Librairie Académique Didier. 1887.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ His last name is also written as D'Alembert in English.
  2. ^ "Alembert, d'". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  3. ^ "Jean Le Rond d'Alembert | French mathematician and philosopher". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  4. ^ D'Alembert 1747a.
  5. ^ D'Alembert 1747b.
  6. ^ D'Alembert 1750.
  7. ^ Hall 1906, p. 5.
  8. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Vol I, London, Charles Knight, 1847, p.417.
  9. ^ Ley, Willy. 1952. Article "Moon of Venus" in Galaxy Science Fiction July 1952. MDP Publishing Galaxy Science Fiction Digital Series, 2016. Retrieved from Google Books.
  10. ^ Hankins 1990, p. 26.
  11. ^ . Royal Society. Archived from the original on 10 April 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
  12. ^ D'Alembert 1743.
  13. ^ a b Friedrich Albert Lange, History of Materialism and Critique of its Present Importance, "Kant and Materialism"
  14. ^ Jean LE ROND, dit d’ ALEMBERT (1717-1783) Secrétaire perpétuel www.academie-francaise.fr/immortels 31 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Smith Richardson 1858, pp. 8–9.
  16. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  17. ^ a b Christensen 1989, p. 415.
  18. ^ Bernard 1980.
  19. ^ The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., s.v. "Alembert, Jean le Rond d'"
  20. ^ D'Alembert 1995, p. 38.
  21. ^ D'Alembert 1995, p. 69.
  22. ^ D'Alembert 1995, p. 100.
  23. ^ Israel 2011, p. 115: "D'Alembert, though privately an atheist and materialist, presented the respectable public face of 'la philosophie' in the French capital while remaining henceforth uninterruptedly aligned with Voltaire."
  24. ^ Force & Popkin 1990, p. 167: "Unlike the French and English deists, and unlike the scientific atheists such as Diderot, d'Alembert, and d'Holbach, such English scientists as David Hartley and Joseph Priestley presented their scientific theories as evidence for their scriptural views."
  25. ^ Horowitz 1999, pp. 52–53: "In positive theory there was a wide divergence between Voltaire's panpsychic deism and Diderot's physiological materialism, or d'Alembert's agnostic positivism and Helvetius' sociological materialism."

References

  • Bernard, Jonathan W. (1980). "The Principle and the Elements: Rameau's Controversy with D'Alembert". Journal of Music Theory. 24 (1): 37–62. doi:10.2307/843738. JSTOR 843738.
  • Briggs, J. Morton (1970). "Jean le Rond d'Alembert". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 110–117. ISBN 0-684-10114-9.
  • Christensen, Thomas (1989). "Music Theory as Scientific Propaganda: The Case of D'Alembert's Élémens [sic] De Musique". Journal of the History of Ideas. 50 (3): 409–27. doi:10.2307/2709569. JSTOR 2709569.
  • Crépel, Pierre (2005). "Traité de dynamique". In Grattan-Guinness, I. (ed.). Landmark Writings in Western Mathematics. Elsevier. pp. 159–67. ISBN 9780444508713.
  • Elsberry, Kristie Beverly (1984). Elémens de musique théorique et pratique suivant les principles de M. Rameau: an Annotated New Translation and a Comparison to Rameau's Theoretical Writings (PhD Dissertation). Florida State University.
  • Force, James E.; Popkin, Richard Henry (1990). Essays on the Context, Nature, and Influence of Isaac Newton's Theology. Springer. ISBN 9780792305835.
  • Grimsley, Ronald (1963). Jean d'Alembert. Oxford University Press.
  • Hall, Evelyn Beatrice (1906). The Friends of Voltaire. Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Hankins, Thomas L. (1990). Jean d'Alembert: Science and the Enlightenment. New York: Gordon and Breach. ISBN 978-2-88124-399-8.
  • Horowitz, Irving Louis (1999). Behemoth: Main Currents in the History and Theory of Political Sociology. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 9781412817929.
  • Israel, Jonathan (2011). Democratic Enlightenment: Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights 1750–1790. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954820-0.
  • Smith Richardson, Nathaniel (1858). "Voltaire and Geneva". The Church Review. G.B. Bassett. 10: 1–14.

External links

  • Works by or about Jean le Rond d'Alembert at Internet Archive
  • Works by Jean le Rond d'Alembert at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • at
  • An Account of the Destruction of the Jesuits in France by Jean Le Rond d' Alembert (1766)
  • Select Eulogies of the Members of the French Academy, With Notes by Jean Le Rond d' Alembert (1799)
  • Gallica-Math
  • The ARTFL Encyclopédie, a project at the University of Chicago (articles in French, scans of 18th century print copies provided)
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Jean le Rond d'Alembert", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  • The Encyclopedia of Diderot & d'Alembert Collaborative Translation Project, product of the Scholarly Publishing Office of the University of Michigan Library (an effort to translate the Encyclopédie into English)
  • The Encyclopédie, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Judith Hawley, Caroline Warman and David Wootton (In Our Time, Oct. 26, 2006)

jean, rond, alembert, alembert, redirects, here, other, uses, alembert, disambiguation, confused, with, delambre, jean, baptiste, rond, alembert, ɛər, french, ʒɑ, batist, ʁɔ, dalɑ, bɛːʁ, november, 1717, october, 1783, french, mathematician, mechanician, physic. d Alembert redirects here For other uses see d Alembert disambiguation Not to be confused with Delambre Jean Baptiste le Rond d Alembert 1 d ae l e m ˈ b ɛer 2 French ʒɑ batist le ʁɔ dalɑ bɛːʁ 16 November 1717 29 October 1783 was a French mathematician mechanician physicist philosopher and music theorist Until 1759 he was together with Denis Diderot a co editor of the Encyclopedie 3 D Alembert s formula for obtaining solutions to the wave equation is named after him 4 5 6 The wave equation is sometimes referred to as d Alembert s equation and the fundamental theorem of algebra is named after d Alembert in French Jean le Rond d AlembertFRSPastel portrait of d Alembert by Maurice Quentin de La Tour 1753BornJean Baptiste le Rond d Alembert 1717 11 16 16 November 1717Paris FranceDied29 October 1783 1783 10 29 aged 65 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchAlma materUniversity of ParisKnown forD Alembert criterionD Alembert forceD Alembert s form of the principle of virtual workD Alembert s formulaD Alembert s equationD Alembert operatorD Alembert s paradoxD Alembert s principleD Alembert systemD Alembert Euler conditionTree of Diderot and d AlembertCauchy Riemann equationsFluid mechanicsEncyclopedieThree body problemAwardsFellow of the Royal SocietyFellow of the Institut de FranceScientific careerFieldsMathematicsMechanicsPhysicsPhilosophyNotable studentsPierre Simon Laplace Contents 1 Early years 2 Studies and adult life 3 Career 4 Music theories 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Fictional portrayal 9 List of works 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly years EditBorn in Paris d Alembert was the natural son of the writer Claudine Guerin de Tencin and the chevalier Louis Camus Destouches an artillery officer Destouches was abroad at the time of d Alembert s birth Days after birth his mother left him on the steps of the Saint Jean le Rond de Paris fr church According to custom he was named after the patron saint of the church D Alembert was placed in an orphanage for foundling children but his father found him and placed him with the wife of a glazier Madame Rousseau with whom he lived for nearly 50 years 7 She gave him little encouragement When he told her of some discovery he had made or something he had written she generally replied You will never be anything but a philosopher and what is that but an ass who plagues himself all his life that he may be talked about after he is dead 8 Destouches secretly paid for the education of Jean le Rond but did not want his paternity officially recognised Studies and adult life EditD Alembert first attended a private school The chevalier Destouches left d Alembert an annuity of 1 200 livres on his death in 1726 Under the influence of the Destouches family at the age of 12 d Alembert entered the Jansenist College des Quatre Nations the institution was also known under the name College Mazarin Here he studied philosophy law and the arts graduating as baccalaureat en arts in 1735 In his later life d Alembert scorned the Cartesian principles he had been taught by the Jansenists physical promotion innate ideas and the vortices The Jansenists steered d Alembert toward an ecclesiastical career attempting to deter him from pursuits such as poetry and mathematics Theology was however rather unsubstantial fodder for d Alembert He entered law school for two years and was nominated avocat in 1738 He was also interested in medicine and mathematics Jean enrolled first as Jean Baptiste Daremberg and subsequently changed his name perhaps for reasons of euphony to d Alembert citation needed Later in recognition of d Alembert s achievements Frederick the Great of Prussia proposed the name d Alembert for a suspected but non existent moon of Venus however d Alembert refused the honor 9 Career Edit Nouvelles experiences sur la resistance des fluides Front page of a 1758 copy of Traite de dynamique In July 1739 he made his first contribution to the field of mathematics pointing out the errors he had detected in Analyse demontree published 1708 by Charles Rene Reynaud in a communication addressed to the Academie des Sciences At the time L analyse demontree was a standard work which d Alembert himself had used to study the foundations of mathematics D Alembert was also a Latin scholar of some note and worked in the latter part of his life on a translation of Tacitus for which he received wide praise including that of Denis Diderot In 1740 he submitted his second scientific work from the field of fluid mechanics Memoire sur la refraction des corps solides which was recognised by Clairaut In this work d Alembert theoretically explained refraction In 1741 after several failed attempts d Alembert was elected into the Academie des Sciences He was later elected to the Berlin Academy in 1746 10 and a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1748 11 In 1743 he published his most famous work Traite de dynamique in which he developed his own laws of motion 12 When the Encyclopedie was organised in the late 1740s d Alembert was engaged as co editor for mathematics and science with Diderot and served until a series of crises temporarily interrupted the publication in 1757 He authored over a thousand articles for it including the famous Preliminary Discourse D Alembert abandoned the foundation of Materialism 13 when he doubted whether there exists outside us anything corresponding to what we suppose we see 13 In this way d Alembert agreed with the Idealist Berkeley and anticipated the transcendental idealism of Kant citation needed In 1752 he wrote about what is now called D Alembert s paradox that the drag on a body immersed in an inviscid incompressible fluid is zero In 1754 d Alembert was elected a member of the Academie des sciences of which he became Permanent Secretary on 9 April 1772 14 In 1757 an article by d Alembert in the seventh volume of the Encyclopedia suggested that the Geneva clergymen had moved from Calvinism to pure Socinianism basing this on information provided by Voltaire The Pastors of Geneva were indignant and appointed a committee to answer these charges Under pressure from Jacob Vernes Jean Jacques Rousseau and others d Alembert eventually made the excuse that he considered anyone who did not accept the Church of Rome to be a Socinianist and that was all he meant and he abstained from further work on the encyclopaedia following his response to the critique 15 He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1781 16 Music theories EditD Alembert s first exposure to music theory was in 1749 when he was called upon to review a Memoire submitted to the Academie by Jean Philippe Rameau This article written in conjunction with Diderot would later form the basis of Rameau s 1750 treatise Demonstration du principe de l harmonie D Alembert wrote a glowing review praising the author s deductive character as an ideal scientific model He saw in Rameau s music theories support for his own scientific ideas a fully systematic method with a strongly deductive synthetic structure Two years later in 1752 d Alembert attempted a fully comprehensive survey of Rameau s works in his Elements de musique theorique et pratique suivant les principes de M Rameau 17 Emphasizing Rameau s main claim that music was a mathematical science that had a single principle from which could be deduced all the elements and rules of musical practice as well as the explicit Cartesian methodology employed d Alembert helped to popularise the work of the composer and advertise his own theories 17 He claims to have clarified developed and simplified the principles of Rameau arguing that the single idea of the corps sonore fr was not sufficient to derive the entirety of music 18 D Alembert instead claimed that three principles would be necessary to generate the major musical mode the minor mode and the identity of octaves Because he was not a musician however d Alembert misconstrued the finer points of Rameau s thinking changing and removing concepts that would not fit neatly into his understanding of music Although initially grateful Rameau eventually turned on d Alembert while voicing his increasing dissatisfaction with J J Rousseau s Encyclopedie articles on music 19 This led to a series of bitter exchanges between the men and contributed to the end of d Alembert and Rameau s friendship A long preliminary discourse d Alembert wrote for the 1762 edition of his Elemens attempted to summarise the dispute and act as a final rebuttal D Alembert also discussed various aspects of the state of music in his celebrated Discours preliminaire of Diderot s Encyclopedie D Alembert claims that compared to the other arts music which speaks simultaneously to the imagination and the senses has not been able to represent or imitate as much of reality because of the lack of sufficient inventiveness and resourcefulness of those who cultivate it 20 He wanted musical expression to deal with all physical sensations rather than merely the passions alone D Alembert believed that modern Baroque music had only achieved perfection in his age as there existed no classical Greek models to study and imitate He claimed that time destroyed all models which the ancients may have left us in this genre 21 He praises Rameau as that manly courageous and fruitful genius who picked up the slack left by Jean Baptiste Lully in the French musical arts 22 Portrait of Jean Le Rond d Alembert 1777 by Catherine Lusurier Personal life EditD Alembert was a participant in several Parisian salons particularly those of Marie Therese Rodet Geoffrin of the marquise du Deffand and of Julie de Lespinasse D Alembert became infatuated with Julie de Lespinasse and eventually took up residence with her Death EditHe suffered bad health for many years and his death was as the result of a urinary bladder illness As a known unbeliever 23 24 25 D Alembert was buried in a common unmarked grave Legacy EditIn France the fundamental theorem of algebra is known as the d Alembert Gauss theorem as an error in d Alembert s proof was caught by Gauss He also created his ratio test a test to determine if a series converges The D Alembert operator which first arose in D Alembert s analysis of vibrating strings plays an important role in modern theoretical physics While he made great strides in mathematics and physics d Alembert is also famously known for incorrectly arguing in Croix ou Pile that the probability of a coin landing heads increased for every time that it came up tails In gambling the strategy of decreasing one s bet the more one wins and increasing one s bet the more one loses is therefore called the D Alembert system a type of martingale In South Australia a small inshore island in south western Spencer Gulf was namedIle d Alembert by the French explorer Nicolas Baudin during his expedition to New Holland The island is better known by the alternative English name of Lipson Island The island is a conservation park and seabird rookery Fictional portrayal EditDiderot portrayed d Alembert in Le reve de D Alembert D Alembert s Dream written after the two men had become estranged It depicts d Alembert ill in bed conducting a debate on materialist philosophy in his sleep D Alembert s Principle a 1996 novel by Andrew Crumey takes its title from D Alembert s principle in physics Its first part describes d Alembert s life and his infatuation with Julie de Lespinasse List of works EditD Alembert Jean Le Rond 1743 Traite de dynamique 2nd ed Gabay 1990 reprint D Alembert Jean Le Rond 1747a Recherches sur la courbe que forme une corde tendue mise en vibration Researches on the curve that a tense cord forms when set into vibration Histoire de l academie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin Vol 3 pp 214 219 D Alembert Jean Le Rond 1747b Suite des recherches sur la courbe que forme une corde tendue mise en vibration Further researches on the curve that a tense cord forms when set into vibration Histoire de l academie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin Vol 3 pp 220 249 D Alembert Jean Le Rond 1750 Addition au memoire sur la courbe que forme une corde tendue mise en vibration Histoire de l academie royale des sciences et belles lettres de Berlin Vol 6 pp 355 60 Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde in French Vol 1 Paris Michel Antoine David 1754 Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde in French Vol 2 Paris Michel Antoine David 1754 Recherches sur differens points importans du systeme du monde in French Vol 3 Paris Michel Antoine David 1756 D Alembert Jean Le Rond 1995 Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot Translated by Schwab Richard N Rex Walter E University of Chicago Press Traite de dynamique in French Paris Jean Baptiste Coignard 3 1743 Memoire sur le calcul integral 1739 prima opera pubblicata Traite de l equilibre et du mouvement des fluides 1744 Reflexions sur la cause generale des vents 1746 Recherches sur les cordes vibrantes 1747 Recherches sur la precession des equinoxes et sur la mutation de l axe de la terre dans le systeme newtonien A Paris Jean Baptiste Coignard 1749 Elements de musique theorique et pratique Lyon Jombert Charles Antoine Bruyset Jean Marie 1 1759 Essai d une nouvelle theorie de la resistance des fluides permanent dead link 1752 Essai sur les elements de philosophie 1759 Nouvelles experiences sur la resistance des fluides in French Paris Jean Francois Louis Chardon 1777 Eloges lus dans les seances publiques de l Academie francaise 1779 Opuscules mathematiques permanent dead link 8 tomi 1761 1780 Œuvres completes Editions CNRS 2002 ISBN 2 271 06013 3 Encyclopedie ou dictionnaire raisonne des sciences des arts et des metiers Flammarion 1993 ISBN 2 08 070426 5 Nouvelles experiences sur la resistance des fluides par mm D Alembert amp l Abbe Bossut A Paris rue Dauphine chez Claude Antoine Jombert fils aine libraire du Roi pour le Genie amp l Artillerie 1777 Melanges de litterature de philosophie et d histoire London printed for C Henderson and sold by T Becket and P A De Hondt in the Strand 1764 Opere in French Vol 1 Paris A Belin 1821 Opere in French Vol 2 Paris A Belin 1821 Opere in French Vol 3 Paris A Belin 1821 Opere in French Vol 4 Paris A Belin 1822 Opere in French Vol 5 Paris A Belin 1822 Oeuvres et correspondances inedites in French Paris Librairie Academique Didier 1887 See also EditList of liberal theorists List of things named after Jean d AlembertNotes Edit His last name is also written as D Alembert in English Alembert d Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Jean Le Rond d Alembert French mathematician and philosopher Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 26 June 2021 D Alembert 1747a D Alembert 1747b D Alembert 1750 Hall 1906 p 5 The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol I London Charles Knight 1847 p 417 Ley Willy 1952 Article Moon of Venus in Galaxy Science Fiction July 1952 MDP Publishing Galaxy Science Fiction Digital Series 2016 Retrieved from Google Books Hankins 1990 p 26 Library and Archive Catalogue Royal Society Archived from the original on 10 April 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2010 D Alembert 1743 a b Friedrich Albert Lange History of Materialism and Critique of its Present Importance Kant and Materialism Jean LE ROND dit d ALEMBERT 1717 1783 Secretaire perpetuel www academie francaise fr immortels Archived 31 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Smith Richardson 1858 pp 8 9 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter A PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 14 April 2011 a b Christensen 1989 p 415 Bernard 1980 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed s v Alembert Jean le Rond d D Alembert 1995 p 38 D Alembert 1995 p 69 D Alembert 1995 p 100 Israel 2011 p 115 D Alembert though privately an atheist and materialist presented the respectable public face of la philosophie in the French capital while remaining henceforth uninterruptedly aligned with Voltaire Force amp Popkin 1990 p 167 Unlike the French and English deists and unlike the scientific atheists such as Diderot d Alembert and d Holbach such English scientists as David Hartley and Joseph Priestley presented their scientific theories as evidence for their scriptural views Horowitz 1999 pp 52 53 In positive theory there was a wide divergence between Voltaire s panpsychic deism and Diderot s physiological materialism or d Alembert s agnostic positivism and Helvetius sociological materialism References EditBernard Jonathan W 1980 The Principle and the Elements Rameau s Controversy with D Alembert Journal of Music Theory 24 1 37 62 doi 10 2307 843738 JSTOR 843738 Briggs J Morton 1970 Jean le Rond d Alembert Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 1 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 110 117 ISBN 0 684 10114 9 Christensen Thomas 1989 Music Theory as Scientific Propaganda The Case of D Alembert s Elemens sic De Musique Journal of the History of Ideas 50 3 409 27 doi 10 2307 2709569 JSTOR 2709569 Crepel Pierre 2005 Traite de dynamique In Grattan Guinness I ed Landmark Writings in Western Mathematics Elsevier pp 159 67 ISBN 9780444508713 Elsberry Kristie Beverly 1984 Elemens de musique theorique et pratique suivant les principles de M Rameau an Annotated New Translation and a Comparison to Rameau s Theoretical Writings PhD Dissertation Florida State University Force James E Popkin Richard Henry 1990 Essays on the Context Nature and Influence of Isaac Newton s Theology Springer ISBN 9780792305835 Grimsley Ronald 1963 Jean d Alembert Oxford University Press Hall Evelyn Beatrice 1906 The Friends of Voltaire Smith Elder amp Co Hankins Thomas L 1990 Jean d Alembert Science and the Enlightenment New York Gordon and Breach ISBN 978 2 88124 399 8 Horowitz Irving Louis 1999 Behemoth Main Currents in the History and Theory of Political Sociology Transaction Publishers ISBN 9781412817929 Israel Jonathan 2011 Democratic Enlightenment Philosophy Revolution and Human Rights 1750 1790 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954820 0 Smith Richardson Nathaniel 1858 Voltaire and Geneva The Church Review G B Bassett 10 1 14 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean le Rond d Alembert Wikisource has original works by or about Jean le Rond d Alembert French Wikisource has original text related to this article Jean le Rond d Alembert Wikiquote has quotations related to Jean le Rond d Alembert Works by or about Jean le Rond d Alembert at Internet Archive Works by Jean le Rond d Alembert at LibriVox public domain audiobooks D Alembert s accusation of Euler s plagiarism at Convergence English translation of part of the Encyclopedie of Diderot and d Alembert An Account of the Destruction of the Jesuits in France by Jean Le Rond d Alembert 1766 Select Eulogies of the Members of the French Academy With Notes by Jean Le Rond d Alembert 1799 Correspondence with Frederick the Great Jean D Alembert Œuvres completes Gallica Math The ARTFL Encyclopedie a project at the University of Chicago articles in French scans of 18th century print copies provided O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Jean le Rond d Alembert MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews The Encyclopedia of Diderot amp d Alembert Collaborative Translation Project product of the Scholarly Publishing Office of the University of Michigan Library an effort to translate the Encyclopedie into English The Encyclopedie BBC Radio 4 discussion with Judith Hawley Caroline Warman and David Wootton In Our Time Oct 26 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean le Rond d 27Alembert amp oldid 1145090866, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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