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Joseph Sauveur

Joseph Sauveur (24 March 1653 – 9 July 1716) was a French mathematician and physicist. He was a professor of mathematics and in 1696 became a member of the French Academy of Sciences.

Life

Joseph Sauveur was born in La Flèche, the son of a provincial notary. Despite a hearing and speech impairment that kept him totally mute until he was seven, Joseph benefited from a fine education at the Jesuit College of La Flèche. At seventeen, his uncle agreed to finance his studies in philosophy and theology at Paris. Joseph, however, discovered Euclid and turned to anatomy and botany. He soon met Cordemoy, reader to the son of Louis XIV; and Cordemoy soon sang his praises to Bossuet, preceptor to the Dauphin. Despite his handicap, Joseph promptly began teaching mathematics to the Dauphine's pages and also to a number of princes, among them Eugene of Savoy. By 1680, he was something of a pet at court, where he gave anatomy courses to courtiers and calculated for them the odds in the game called "basset."

In 1681, Sauveur did the mathematical calculations for a waterworks project for the "Grand Condé's" estate at Chantilly, working with Edmé Mariotte, the "father of French hydraulics. Condé became very fond of Sauveur and severely reprimanded anyone who laughed at the mathematician's speech impairment. Condé would invite Saveur to stay at Chantilly. It was there that Sauveur did his work on hydrostatics.

 
Frontpage of Geometrie élémentaire et pratique (1753) by Joseph Sauveur, edited and augmented by Guillaume Le Blond

During the summer of 1689, Sauveur was chosen to be the science and mathematics teacher for the Duke of Chartres, Louis XIV's nephew. For the prince, he drew up a manuscript outlining the "elements" of geometry and, in collaboration with Marshal Vauban, a manuscript on the "elements of military fortification." (In 1691 Sauveur and Chartres were present at the siege of Mons by the French.) Another of the prince's teachers was Étienne Loulié, a musician engaged to teach him the "elements" of musical theory and notation. Loulié and Sauveur joined forces to show the prince how mathematics and musical theory were inter-related. Remnants of this joint course have survived in Sauveur's manuscript treatise on the theory of music, and in Loulié's Éléments. In the years that followed, Sauveur taught mathematics to various princes of the royal family. In 1686 he obtained the mathematics chair at the Collège de France, which granted him a rare exemption: since he was incapable of reciting a speech from memory, he was permitted to read his inaugural lecture.

Circa 1694, Sauveur began working with Loulié on "the science of sound", that is, acoustics. As Fontenelle put it, Sauveur laid out a vast plan that amounted to the "discovery of an unknown country", and that created for him a "personal empire", the study of "acoustical sound" (le son acoustique). But, as Fontenelle pointed out, "He had neither a voice nor hearing, yet he could think only of music. He was reduced to borrowing the voice and the ear of someone else. and in return he gave hitherto unknown demonstrations to musicians." The Duke of Chartres did everything he could to make the undertaking successful. Sauveur's work, continued Fontenelle, resulted in "a new musical language that was more convenient and more broad, a new system of sounds, an unusual monochord, and échomètre, fixed sound [le son fixe, that is, absolute frequency], the nodes of undulating strings. [...] This pushed him all the way to the music of the ancient Greeks and Romans, the Arabs, the Turks and the Persians."

Sauveur is known principally for his detailed studies on acoustics. Indeed, he has been credited with coining the term acoustique, which he derived from the ancient Greek word ακουστός, meaning "able to be heard". His work involved researching the correlation between frequency and musical pitch, and – putting Fontenelle's statements in modern terms – he conducted studies on subjects such as the vibrating string, tuning pitch, harmonics, ranges of voices and musical instruments, et al. He also created a measure of intervals concerning the octave. Though Marin Mersenne's 1637 theories are correct, his measurements are not very exact, and his calculation of Mersenne's laws was greatly improved by Sauveur through the use of acoustic beats and metronomes.[1] The following are some of the terms Sauveur used as logarithmic divisions:

  • méride: 1/43 part of an octave
  • eptaméride (or heptaméride): 1/301 part of an octave, or 1/7 of a méride; this term would later be known as a savart.
  • demi-heptaméride: 1/602 part of an octave; 1/2 of an eptaméride.
  • decaméride: 1/3010 part of an octave; 1/10 of an eptaméride
  • Also 1/55 of an octave would become known as a "Sauveur comma".

In 1696, Sauveur had been elected to the French Royal Academy of Sciences and most of his work on acoustics was therefore done under its aegis. He soon ran into what proved to be an insurmountable obstacle: the musicians who were serving as his ears and voices had become exasperated at the mathematician's insistence upon using those new measuring units, arguing that they were simply too small for the human ear to distinguish and the human voice to replicate. Furthermore, they did not like the equal tuning he was proposing for instruments, nor the pa, ra, ga, so, bo, and so forth that were supposed to replace the familiar ut, re, mi, fa, sol.... (Sauveur had broken the octave into 3,010 parts.) A break took place circa 1699, and Sauveur had difficulty completing some of his experiments. Actually, Loulié had begun going his own way by 1698, when he published a little book called the Nouveau Sistème, which presents his work with Saveur from a musician's perspective. Loulié's surviving manuscripts round out the musician's contributions to Sauveur's project.

It was not until 1701 that Sauveur presented the results of his research to the Academy. The presentation was studded with jibes about musicians and their closed minds. In this same presentation, he rightly criticized Loulié's practical inventions as insufficiently scientific. In 1696, Loulié had published a description of a metronome-like instrument called the "chronomètre", which Loulié had invented with practicing musicians in mind. Now, in 1701, Sauveur focused on the shortcomings of his former colleague's device, compared with his own échomètre: Loulié's invention was not based on the second, and the swings of the pendulum were not related to one specific note value. In that same presentation before the Academy, Sauveur presented his own monocorde for tuning harpsichords (it was based on an octave divided into equal units composed of the tiny, precise units of his "new system"); and he contrasted his invention with Loulié's sonomètre, approved by the Academy in 1699, which replicated the unequal intervals actually being used in France.

Sauveur, whom a contemporary described as "over-obliging, gentle, and humorless", was declared a "pensioned veteran" of the Academy in on March 4, 1699. He died in Paris in 1716.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Beyer, Robert Thomas (1999). Sounds of Our Times: Two Hundred Years of Acoustics. Springer. p.10. ISBN 978-0-387-98435-3.

References

  • Bibliothèque nationale de France, ms. n.a. 4674, Joseph Sauveur's "Traité de la Théorie de la Musique (1697) (his work with musician Étienne Loulié)
  • Richard Semmens, Joseph Sauveur's "Treatise of the Theory of Music". A Study, Diplomatic Transcription and Annotated Translation, Studies in Music from the University of Western Ontario, vol. 11, 1987
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France, ms. fr. 12381, Joseph Sauveur's "Éléments de fortification" written for the Duke of Chartres
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France, ms. fr. 14737, "Éléments de géométrie par Mr. Sauveur" (used to teach the princes)
  • Archives of the Académie des Sciences, Paris, Procès verbaux, vol. 20, February through April 1701 (his work on acoustics with musician Étienne Loulié)
  • Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences (Paris, 1701), pp. 299–366 (his work on acoustics with musician Étienne Loulié)
  • Histoire de l'Académie Royale des Sciences (Paris, 1704), for 1701, pp. 123–139, 298–318 (his work on acoustics with musician Étienne Loulié)
  • Fontenelle, "Éloge de Monsieur Sauveur", Éloges des Académiciens de l'Académie Royale des Sciences morts depuis l'an 1699 (Paris, 1766), pp. 424–438
  • Joseph Sauveur: Collected Writings on Musical Acoustics (Paris 1700–1713); edited by Rudolf Rasch (The Diapason Press)
  • French Wikipedia Site; Joseph Sauveur
  • Logarithmic Interval Measures by Manuel Op de Coul
  • Patricia M. Ranum, "Étienne Loulié (1654–1702), Musicien de Mademoiselle de Guise, Pédagogue et Théoricien", Recherches, 25 (1987), pp. 27–75 (especially, pp. 67–75, on the education of the Duke of Chartres); and 26 (1988–1990), pp. 5–49 (especially pp. 5–26, on his collaboration with Étienne Loulié on acoustics)
  • Patricia M. Ranum, "Le Musicien Tailleur: Étienne Loulié et la musique des Anciens", in Louise Godard de Donville, ed., D'un Siècle à l'autre: Anciens et modernes (Marseille, 1987), pp. 239–59 (on the musicians' dispute with Sauveur)
  • Adam Fix, “A Science Superior to Music: Joseph Sauveur and the Estrangement between Music and Acoustics,” Physics in Perspective 17, no. 3 (2015): 173–97.

External links

  •   Media related to Joseph Sauveur at Wikimedia Commons

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Joseph Sauveur news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Joseph Sauveur 24 March 1653 9 July 1716 was a French mathematician and physicist He was a professor of mathematics and in 1696 became a member of the French Academy of Sciences Contents 1 Life 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksLife EditJoseph Sauveur was born in La Fleche the son of a provincial notary Despite a hearing and speech impairment that kept him totally mute until he was seven Joseph benefited from a fine education at the Jesuit College of La Fleche At seventeen his uncle agreed to finance his studies in philosophy and theology at Paris Joseph however discovered Euclid and turned to anatomy and botany He soon met Cordemoy reader to the son of Louis XIV and Cordemoy soon sang his praises to Bossuet preceptor to the Dauphin Despite his handicap Joseph promptly began teaching mathematics to the Dauphine s pages and also to a number of princes among them Eugene of Savoy By 1680 he was something of a pet at court where he gave anatomy courses to courtiers and calculated for them the odds in the game called basset In 1681 Sauveur did the mathematical calculations for a waterworks project for the Grand Conde s estate at Chantilly working with Edme Mariotte the father of French hydraulics Conde became very fond of Sauveur and severely reprimanded anyone who laughed at the mathematician s speech impairment Conde would invite Saveur to stay at Chantilly It was there that Sauveur did his work on hydrostatics Frontpage of Geometrie elementaire et pratique 1753 by Joseph Sauveur edited and augmented by Guillaume Le Blond During the summer of 1689 Sauveur was chosen to be the science and mathematics teacher for the Duke of Chartres Louis XIV s nephew For the prince he drew up a manuscript outlining the elements of geometry and in collaboration with Marshal Vauban a manuscript on the elements of military fortification In 1691 Sauveur and Chartres were present at the siege of Mons by the French Another of the prince s teachers was Etienne Loulie a musician engaged to teach him the elements of musical theory and notation Loulie and Sauveur joined forces to show the prince how mathematics and musical theory were inter related Remnants of this joint course have survived in Sauveur s manuscript treatise on the theory of music and in Loulie s Elements In the years that followed Sauveur taught mathematics to various princes of the royal family In 1686 he obtained the mathematics chair at the College de France which granted him a rare exemption since he was incapable of reciting a speech from memory he was permitted to read his inaugural lecture Circa 1694 Sauveur began working with Loulie on the science of sound that is acoustics As Fontenelle put it Sauveur laid out a vast plan that amounted to the discovery of an unknown country and that created for him a personal empire the study of acoustical sound le son acoustique But as Fontenelle pointed out He had neither a voice nor hearing yet he could think only of music He was reduced to borrowing the voice and the ear of someone else and in return he gave hitherto unknown demonstrations to musicians The Duke of Chartres did everything he could to make the undertaking successful Sauveur s work continued Fontenelle resulted in a new musical language that was more convenient and more broad a new system of sounds an unusual monochord and echometre fixed sound le son fixe that is absolute frequency the nodes of undulating strings This pushed him all the way to the music of the ancient Greeks and Romans the Arabs the Turks and the Persians Sauveur is known principally for his detailed studies on acoustics Indeed he has been credited with coining the term acoustique which he derived from the ancient Greek word akoystos meaning able to be heard His work involved researching the correlation between frequency and musical pitch and putting Fontenelle s statements in modern terms he conducted studies on subjects such as the vibrating string tuning pitch harmonics ranges of voices and musical instruments et al He also created a measure of intervals concerning the octave Though Marin Mersenne s 1637 theories are correct his measurements are not very exact and his calculation of Mersenne s laws was greatly improved by Sauveur through the use of acoustic beats and metronomes 1 The following are some of the terms Sauveur used as logarithmic divisions meride 1 43 part of an octave eptameride or heptameride 1 301 part of an octave or 1 7 of a meride this term would later be known as a savart demi heptameride 1 602 part of an octave 1 2 of an eptameride decameride 1 3010 part of an octave 1 10 of an eptameride Also 1 55 of an octave would become known as a Sauveur comma In 1696 Sauveur had been elected to the French Royal Academy of Sciences and most of his work on acoustics was therefore done under its aegis He soon ran into what proved to be an insurmountable obstacle the musicians who were serving as his ears and voices had become exasperated at the mathematician s insistence upon using those new measuring units arguing that they were simply too small for the human ear to distinguish and the human voice to replicate Furthermore they did not like the equal tuning he was proposing for instruments nor the pa ra ga so bo and so forth that were supposed to replace the familiar ut re mi fa sol Sauveur had broken the octave into 3 010 parts A break took place circa 1699 and Sauveur had difficulty completing some of his experiments Actually Loulie had begun going his own way by 1698 when he published a little book called the Nouveau Sisteme which presents his work with Saveur from a musician s perspective Loulie s surviving manuscripts round out the musician s contributions to Sauveur s project It was not until 1701 that Sauveur presented the results of his research to the Academy The presentation was studded with jibes about musicians and their closed minds In this same presentation he rightly criticized Loulie s practical inventions as insufficiently scientific In 1696 Loulie had published a description of a metronome like instrument called the chronometre which Loulie had invented with practicing musicians in mind Now in 1701 Sauveur focused on the shortcomings of his former colleague s device compared with his own echometre Loulie s invention was not based on the second and the swings of the pendulum were not related to one specific note value In that same presentation before the Academy Sauveur presented his own monocorde for tuning harpsichords it was based on an octave divided into equal units composed of the tiny precise units of his new system and he contrasted his invention with Loulie s sonometre approved by the Academy in 1699 which replicated the unequal intervals actually being used in France Sauveur whom a contemporary described as over obliging gentle and humorless was declared a pensioned veteran of the Academy in on March 4 1699 He died in Paris in 1716 See also EditMagic square Mersenne s laws Sauveur pitchNotes Edit Beyer Robert Thomas 1999 Sounds of Our Times Two Hundred Years of Acoustics Springer p 10 ISBN 978 0 387 98435 3 References EditBibliotheque nationale de France ms n a 4674 Joseph Sauveur s Traite de la Theorie de la Musique 1697 his work with musician Etienne Loulie Richard Semmens Joseph Sauveur s Treatise of the Theory of Music A Study Diplomatic Transcription and Annotated Translation Studies in Music from the University of Western Ontario vol 11 1987 Bibliotheque nationale de France ms fr 12381 Joseph Sauveur s Elements de fortification written for the Duke of Chartres Bibliotheque nationale de France ms fr 14737 Elements de geometrie par Mr Sauveur used to teach the princes Archives of the Academie des Sciences Paris Proces verbaux vol 20 February through April 1701 his work on acoustics with musician Etienne Loulie Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences Paris 1701 pp 299 366 his work on acoustics with musician Etienne Loulie Histoire de l Academie Royale des Sciences Paris 1704 for 1701 pp 123 139 298 318 his work on acoustics with musician Etienne Loulie Fontenelle Eloge de Monsieur Sauveur Eloges des Academiciens de l Academie Royale des Sciences morts depuis l an 1699 Paris 1766 pp 424 438 Joseph Sauveur Collected Writings on Musical Acoustics Paris 1700 1713 edited by Rudolf Rasch The Diapason Press French Wikipedia Site Joseph Sauveur Logarithmic Interval Measures by Manuel Op de Coul Patricia M Ranum Etienne Loulie 1654 1702 Musicien de Mademoiselle de Guise Pedagogue et Theoricien Recherches 25 1987 pp 27 75 especially pp 67 75 on the education of the Duke of Chartres and 26 1988 1990 pp 5 49 especially pp 5 26 on his collaboration with Etienne Loulie on acoustics Patricia M Ranum Le Musicien Tailleur Etienne Loulie et la musique des Anciens in Louise Godard de Donville ed D un Siecle a l autre Anciens et modernes Marseille 1987 pp 239 59 on the musicians dispute with Sauveur Adam Fix A Science Superior to Music Joseph Sauveur and the Estrangement between Music and Acoustics Physics in Perspective 17 no 3 2015 173 97 External links Edit Media related to Joseph Sauveur at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Sauveur amp oldid 1120688264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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