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Nicolo Tartaglia

Nicolo, known as Tartaglia (Italian: [tarˈtaʎʎa]; 1499/1500 – 13 December 1557), was an Italian mathematician, engineer (designing fortifications), a surveyor (of topography, seeking the best means of defense or offense) and a bookkeeper from the then Republic of Venice. He published many books, including the first Italian translations of Archimedes and Euclid, and an acclaimed compilation of mathematics. Tartaglia was the first to apply mathematics to the investigation of the paths of cannonballs, known as ballistics, in his Nova Scientia (A New Science, 1537); his work was later partially validated and partially superseded by Galileo's studies on falling bodies. He also published a treatise on retrieving sunken ships.

Tartaglia
Born1499/1500
Died13 December 1557
NationalityItalian
Known forCardano–Tartaglia formula
Early research into ballistics
Tartaglia's triangle
Artillery theory
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics, engineering
Notable studentsOstilio Ricci[1]

Personal life edit

Niccolò was born in Brescia, the son of Michele, a dispatch rider who travelled to neighbouring towns to deliver mail. In 1506, Michele was murdered by robbers, and Niccolò, his two siblings, and his mother were left impoverished. Niccolò experienced further tragedy in 1512 when King Louis XII's troops invaded Brescia during the War of the League of Cambrai against Venice. The militia of Brescia defended their city for seven days. When the French finally broke through, they took their revenge by massacring the inhabitants of Brescia. By the end of battle, over 45,000 residents were killed. During the massacre, Niccolò and his family sought sanctuary in the local cathedral. But the French entered and a soldier sliced Niccolò's jaw and palate with a saber and left him for dead. His mother nursed him back to health but the young boy was left with a speech impediment, prompting the nickname "Tartaglia" ("stammerer"). After this he would never shave, and grew a beard to camouflage his scars.[2]

His surname at birth, if any, is disputed. Some sources have him as "Niccolò Fontana", but others claim that the only support for this is a will in which he named a brother, Zuampiero Fontana, as heir, and point out that this does not imply he had the same surname.

Tartaglia's biographer Arnoldo Masotti writes that:

At the age of about fourteen, he [Tartaglia] went to a Master Francesco to learn to write the alphabet; but by the time he reached “k,” he was no longer able to pay the teacher. “From that day,” he later wrote in a moving autobiographical sketch, “I never returned to a tutor, but continued to labour by myself over the works of dead men, accompanied only by the daughter of poverty that is called industry” (Quesiti, bk. VI, question 8).[3]

Tartaglia moved to Verona around 1517, then to Venice in 1534, a major European commercial hub and one of the great centres of the Italian renaissance at this time. Also relevant is Venice's place at the forefront of European printing culture in the sixteenth century, making early printed texts available even to poor scholars if sufficiently motivated or well-connected — Tartaglia knew of Archimedes' work on the quadrature of the parabola, for example, from Guarico's Latin edition of 1503, which he had found "in the hands of a sausage-seller in Verona in 1531" (in mano di un salzizaro in Verona, l'anno 1531 in his words).[4]

Tartaglia eked out a living teaching practical mathematics in abacus schools and earned a penny where he could:

This remarkable man [Tartaglia] was a self-educated mathematics teacher who sold mathematical advice to gunners and architects, ten pennies one question, and had to litigate with his customers when they gave him a worn-out cloak for his lectures on Euclid instead of the payment agreed on.[5]

He died in Venice.

Ballistics edit

 
Various projectile trajectories from Nova Scientia.

Nova Scientia (1537) was Tartaglia's first published work, described by Matteo Valleriani as:

... one of the most fundamental works on mechanics of the Renaissance, indeed, the first to transform aspects of practical knowledge accumulated by the early modern artillerists into a theoretical and mathematical framework.[6]

Then dominant Aristotelian physics preferred categories like "heavy" and "natural" and "violent" to describe motion, generally eschewing mathematical explanations. Tartaglia brought mathematical models to the fore, "eviscerat[ing] Aristotelian terms of projectile movement" in the words of Mary J. Henninger-Voss.[7] One of his findings was that the maximum range of a projectile was achieved by directing the cannon at a 45° angle to the horizon.

Tartaglia's model for a cannonball's flight was that it proceeded from the cannon in a straight line, then after a while started to arc towards the earth along a circular path, then finally dropped in another straight line directly towards the earth.[8] At the end of Book 2 of Nova Scientia, Tartaglia proposes to find the length of that initial rectilinear path for a projectile fired at an elevation of 45°, engaging in a Euclidean-style argument, but one with numbers attached to line segments and areas, and eventually proceeds algebraically to find the desired quantity (procederemo per algebra in his words).[9]

Mary J. Henninger-Voss notes that "Tartaglia's work on military science had an enormous circulation throughout Europe", being a reference for common gunners into the eighteenth century, sometimes through unattributed translations. He influenced Galileo as well, who owned "richly annotated" copies of his works on ballistics as he set about solving the projectile problem once and for all.[10]

Translations edit

Archimedes' works began to be studied outside the universities in Tartaglia's day as exemplary of the notion that mathematics is the key to understanding physics, Federigo Commandino reflecting this notion when saying in 1558 that "with respect to geometry no one of sound mind could deny that Archimedes was some god".[11] Tartaglia published a 71-page Latin edition of Archimedes in 1543, Opera Archimedis Syracusani philosophi et mathematici ingeniosissimi, containing Archimedes' works on the parabola, the circle, centres of gravity, and floating bodies. Guarico had published Latin editions of the first two in 1503, but the works on centres of gravity and floating bodies had not been published before. Tartaglia published Italian versions of some Archimedean texts later in life, his executor continuing to publish his translations after his death. Galileo probably learned of Archimedes' work through these widely disseminated editions.[12]

Tartaglia's Italian edition of Euclid in 1543, Euclide Megarense philosopho, was especially significant as the first translation of the Elements into any modern European language. For two centuries Euclid had been taught from two Latin translations taken from an Arabic source; these contained errors in Book V, the Eudoxian theory of proportion, which rendered it unusable. Tartaglia's edition was based on Zamberti's Latin translation of an uncorrupted Greek text, and rendered Book V correctly. He also wrote the first modern and useful commentary on the theory.[13] This work went through many editions in the sixteenth century and helped diffuse knowledge of mathematics to a non-academic but increasingly well-informed literate and numerate public in Italy. The theory became an essential tool for Galileo, as it had been for Archimedes.

General Trattato di Numeri et Misure edit

 
General trattato di numeri et misure, 1556

Tartaglia exemplified and eventually transcended the abaco tradition that had flourished in Italy since the twelfth century, a tradition of concrete commercial mathematics taught at abacus schools maintained by communities of merchants. Maestros d'abaco like Tartaglia taught not with the abacus but with paper-and-pen, inculcating algorithms of the type found in grade schools today.

Tartaglia's masterpiece was the General Trattato di Numeri et Misure (General Treatise on Number and Measure),[14] a 1500-page encyclopedia in six parts written in the Venetian dialect, the first three coming out in 1556 about the time of Tartaglia's death and the last three published posthumously by his literary executor and publisher Curtio Troiano in 1560. David Eugene Smith wrote of the General Trattato that it was:

the best treatise on arithmetic that appeared in Italy in his century, containing a very full discussion of the numerical operations and the commercial rules of the Italian arithmeticians. The life of the people, the customs of the merchants, and the efforts at improving arithmetic in the 16th century are all set forth in this remarkable work.[15]

Part I is 554 pages long and constitutes essentially commercial arithmetic, taking up such topics as basic operations with the complex currencies of the day (ducats, soldi, pizolli, and so on), exchanging currencies, calculating interest, and dividing profits into joint companies. The book is replete with worked examples with much emphasis on methods and rules (that is, algorithms), all ready to use virtually as is.[16]

Part II takes up more general arithmetic problems, including progressions, powers, binomial expansions, Tartaglia's triangle (also known as "Pascal's triangle"), calculations with roots, and proportions / fractions.[17]

Part IV concerns triangles, regular polygons, the Platonic solids, and Archimedean topics like the quadrature of the circle and circumscribing a cylinder around a sphere.[18]

Tartaglia's triangle edit

 
Tartaglia's triangle from General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part II, Book 2, p. 69.

Tartaglia was proficient with binomial expansions and included many worked examples in Part II of the General Trattato, one a detailed explanation of how to calculate the summands of  , including the appropriate binomial coefficients.[19]

Tartaglia knew of Pascal's triangle one hundred years before Pascal, as shown in this image from the General Trattato. His examples are numeric, but he thinks about it geometrically, the horizontal line   at the top of the triangle being broken into two segments   and  , where point   is the apex of the triangle. Binomial expansions amount to taking   for exponents   as you go down the triangle. The symbols along the outside represent powers at this early stage of algebraic notation:  , and so on. He writes explicitly about the additive formation rule, that (for example) the adjacent 15 and 20 in the fifth row add up to 35, which appears beneath them in the sixth row.[20]

Solution to cubic equations edit

Tartaglia is perhaps best known today for his conflicts with Gerolamo Cardano. In 1539, Cardano cajoled Tartaglia into revealing his solution to the cubic equations by promising not to publish them. Tartaglia divulged the secrets of the solutions of three different forms of the cubic equation in verse.[21] Several years later, Cardano happened to see unpublished work by Scipione del Ferro who independently came up with the same solution as Tartaglia. (Tartaglia had previously been challenged by del Ferro's student Fiore, which made Tartaglia aware that a solution existed.)[22]

As the unpublished work was dated before Tartaglia's, Cardano decided his promise could be broken and included Tartaglia's solution in his next publication. Even though Cardano credited his discovery, Tartaglia was extremely upset and a famous public challenge match resulted between himself and Cardano's student, Ludovico Ferrari. Widespread stories that Tartaglia devoted the rest of his life to ruining Cardano, however, appear to be completely fabricated.[23] Mathematical historians now credit both Cardano and Tartaglia with the formula to solve cubic equations, referring to it as the "Cardano–Tartaglia formula".

Volume of a tetrahedron edit

 
13-14-15-20-18-16 pyramid from the General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part IV, Book 2, p. 35.

Tartaglia was a prodigious calculator and master of solid geometry. In Part IV of the General Trattato he shows by example how to calculate the height of a pyramid on a triangular base, that is, an irregular tetrahedron.[24]

The base of the pyramid is a   triangle  , with edges of length  , and   rising up to the apex   from points  ,  , and   respectively. Base triangle   partitions into   and   triangles by dropping the perpendicular from point   to side  . He proceeds to erect a triangle in the plane perpendicular to line   through the pyramid's apex, point  , calculating all three sides of this triangle and noting that its height is the height of the pyramid. At the last step, he applies what amounts to this formula for the height   of a triangle in terms of its sides   (the height from side   to its opposite vertex):

 

a formula deriving from the Law of Cosines (not that he cites any justification in this section of the General Trattato).

Tartaglia drops a digit early in the calculation, taking   as  , but his method is sound. The final (correct) answer is:

 

The volume of the pyramid is easily gotten after that (not that Tartaglia gives it):

 

Simon Stevin invented decimal fractions later in the sixteenth century, so the last figure would have been foreign to Tartaglia, who always used fractions. All the same, his approach is in some ways a modern one, suggesting by example an algorithm for calculating the height of most or all irregular tetrahedra, but (as usual for him) he gives no explicit formula.

Works edit

  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part I (Venice, 1556)
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part II (Venice, 1556)
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part III (Venice, 1556)
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part IV (Venice, 1560)
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part V (Venice, 1560)
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò, General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part VI (Venice, 1560)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stillman Drake, Galileo at Work: His Scientific Biography, Dover, 1978, p. 3.
  2. ^ Strathern 2013, p. 189
  3. ^ Masotti, Arnoldo, Niccolò Tartaglia in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
  4. ^ See Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part IV, Book 3, p. 43 for the sausage seller.
  5. ^ Zilsel, Edgar, The Social Origins of Modern Science, p. 35.
  6. ^ See Valleriani, Matteo, Metallurgy, Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments: The Nova Scientia of Nicolò Tartaglia, 2013, p. 1.
  7. ^ Henninger-Voss, Mary J., "How the 'New Science' of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos", Journal of the History of Ideas 63, 3 (July 2002), pp. 371-397. "eviscerated": p. 376.
  8. ^ See Valleriani, Matteo, Metallurgy, Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments: The Nova Scientia of Nicolò Tartaglia, 2013, pp. 169-181.
  9. ^ See Valleriani, Matteo, Metallurgy, Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments: The Nova Scientia of Nicolò Tartaglia, 2013, pp. 176-177.
  10. ^ See Henninger-Voss, Mary J., "How the 'New Science' of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos", Journal of the History of Ideas 63, 3 (July 2002), pp. 391-393 for discussion and quotes.
  11. ^ Clagett, Marshall, "William of Moerbeke: Translator of Archimedes", pp. 356-366.
  12. ^ Henninger-Voss, Mary J., "'New Science' of Cannons", p. 392.
  13. ^ See Malet, Antoni, "Euclid’s Swan Song: Euclid’s Elements in Early Modern Europe", where Tartaglia's work on Euclid is described as "mathematically cogent, innovative, and influential" (p. 207).
  14. ^ Tartaglia, Niccolò, 1556-1560
  15. ^ Smith 1985, p. 298.
  16. ^ Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part I.
  17. ^ Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part II.
  18. ^ Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part IV.
  19. ^ See Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part II, Book 2, p. 51v for expanding  .
  20. ^ See Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part II, Book 2, p. 72 for discussion of the additive rule in "Pascal's triangle".
  21. ^ Katz 1998, p. 359
  22. ^ Feldmann, Richard W. (1961). "The Cardano-Tartaglia dispute". The Mathematics Teacher. 54 (3): 160–163. ISSN 0025-5769. JSTOR 27956338. His student, Antonio Maria Fiore, knew the solution and attempted to gain a reputation by exploiting his master's discovery. He challenged Tartaglia with thirty questions, all of which reduced to the solution of x3 + ax = b.
  23. ^ Tony Rothman, Cardano v Tartaglia: The Great Feud Goes Supernatural.
  24. ^ See Tartaglia, Niccolò. General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Part IV, Book 2, p. 35r for the calculation of the height of a 13-14-15-20-18-16 pyramid.

References edit

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Tartaglia, Niccolò" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Clagett, Marshall (1982). "William of Moerbeke: Translator of Archimedes". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 126 (5): 356–366..
  • Henninger-Voss, Mary J. (July 2002). "How the 'New Science' of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos". Journal of the History of Ideas. 63 (3): 371–397. doi:10.1353/jhi.2002.0029. S2CID 170464547.
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Nicolò Tartaglia" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Charles Hutton (1815). "Tartaglia or Tartaglia (Nicholas)". A philosophical and mathematical dictionary. Printed for the author. p. 482.
  • Katz, Victor J. (1998), A History of Mathematics: An Introduction (2nd ed.), Reading: Addison Wesley Longman, ISBN 0-321-01618-1.
  • Malet, Antoni (2012). "Euclid's Swan Song: Euclid's Elements in Early Modern Europe". In Olmos, Paula (ed.). Greek Science in the Long Run: Essays on the Greek Scientific Tradition (4th c. BCE-17th c. CE). Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 205–234. ISBN 978-1-4438-3775-0..
  • Masotti, Arnoldo (1970). "Niccolò Tartaglia". In Gillispie, Charles (ed.). Dictionary of Scientific Biography. New York: Scribner & American Council of Learned Societies.
  • Smith, D.E. (1958), History of Mathematics, vol. I, New York: Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-20429-4.
  • Strathern, Paul (2013), Venetians, New York, NY: Pegasus Books.
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò (1543). Opera Archimedis Syracusani philosophi et mathematici ingeniosissimi. Venice.
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò (1543). Euclide Megarense philosopho. Venice.
  • Tartaglia, Niccolò (1556–1560), General Trattato di Numeri et Misure, Venice: Curtio Troiano.
  • Valleriani, Matteo (2013), Metallurgy, Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments: The Nova Scientia of Nicolò Tartaglia, Berlin: Edition Open Access / Max Planck Research Library, ISBN 978-3-8442-5258-3.
  • Zilsel, Edgar (2000), Raven, Diederick; Krohn, Wolfgang; Cohen, Robert S. (eds.), The Social Origins of Modern Science, Springer Netherlands, ISBN 0-7923-6457-0.

Further reading edit

  • Valleriani, Matteo, Metallurgy, Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments: The Nova scientia of Nicolò Tartaglia

External links edit

nicolo, tartaglia, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, message, nicolo, kn. 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 April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Nicolo known as Tartaglia Italian tarˈtaʎʎa 1499 1500 13 December 1557 was an Italian mathematician engineer designing fortifications a surveyor of topography seeking the best means of defense or offense and a bookkeeper from the then Republic of Venice He published many books including the first Italian translations of Archimedes and Euclid and an acclaimed compilation of mathematics Tartaglia was the first to apply mathematics to the investigation of the paths of cannonballs known as ballistics in his Nova Scientia A New Science 1537 his work was later partially validated and partially superseded by Galileo s studies on falling bodies He also published a treatise on retrieving sunken ships TartagliaBorn1499 1500Brescia Republic of VeniceDied13 December 1557Venice Republic of VeniceNationalityItalianKnown forCardano Tartaglia formulaEarly research into ballisticsTartaglia s triangleArtillery theoryScientific careerFieldsMathematics engineeringNotable studentsOstilio Ricci 1 Contents 1 Personal life 2 Ballistics 3 Translations 4 General Trattato di Numeri et Misure 5 Tartaglia s triangle 6 Solution to cubic equations 7 Volume of a tetrahedron 8 Works 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksPersonal life editNiccolo was born in Brescia the son of Michele a dispatch rider who travelled to neighbouring towns to deliver mail In 1506 Michele was murdered by robbers and Niccolo his two siblings and his mother were left impoverished Niccolo experienced further tragedy in 1512 when King Louis XII s troops invaded Brescia during the War of the League of Cambrai against Venice The militia of Brescia defended their city for seven days When the French finally broke through they took their revenge by massacring the inhabitants of Brescia By the end of battle over 45 000 residents were killed During the massacre Niccolo and his family sought sanctuary in the local cathedral But the French entered and a soldier sliced Niccolo s jaw and palate with a saber and left him for dead His mother nursed him back to health but the young boy was left with a speech impediment prompting the nickname Tartaglia stammerer After this he would never shave and grew a beard to camouflage his scars 2 His surname at birth if any is disputed Some sources have him as Niccolo Fontana but others claim that the only support for this is a will in which he named a brother Zuampiero Fontana as heir and point out that this does not imply he had the same surname Tartaglia s biographer Arnoldo Masotti writes that At the age of about fourteen he Tartaglia went to a Master Francesco to learn to write the alphabet but by the time he reached k he was no longer able to pay the teacher From that day he later wrote in a moving autobiographical sketch I never returned to a tutor but continued to labour by myself over the works of dead men accompanied only by the daughter of poverty that is called industry Quesiti bk VI question 8 3 Tartaglia moved to Verona around 1517 then to Venice in 1534 a major European commercial hub and one of the great centres of the Italian renaissance at this time Also relevant is Venice s place at the forefront of European printing culture in the sixteenth century making early printed texts available even to poor scholars if sufficiently motivated or well connected Tartaglia knew of Archimedes work on the quadrature of the parabola for example from Guarico s Latin edition of 1503 which he had found in the hands of a sausage seller in Verona in 1531 in mano di un salzizaro in Verona l anno 1531 in his words 4 Tartaglia eked out a living teaching practical mathematics in abacus schools and earned a penny where he could This remarkable man Tartaglia was a self educated mathematics teacher who sold mathematical advice to gunners and architects ten pennies one question and had to litigate with his customers when they gave him a worn out cloak for his lectures on Euclid instead of the payment agreed on 5 He died in Venice Ballistics edit nbsp Various projectile trajectories from Nova Scientia Nova Scientia 1537 was Tartaglia s first published work described by Matteo Valleriani as one of the most fundamental works on mechanics of the Renaissance indeed the first to transform aspects of practical knowledge accumulated by the early modern artillerists into a theoretical and mathematical framework 6 Then dominant Aristotelian physics preferred categories like heavy and natural and violent to describe motion generally eschewing mathematical explanations Tartaglia brought mathematical models to the fore eviscerat ing Aristotelian terms of projectile movement in the words of Mary J Henninger Voss 7 One of his findings was that the maximum range of a projectile was achieved by directing the cannon at a 45 angle to the horizon Tartaglia s model for a cannonball s flight was that it proceeded from the cannon in a straight line then after a while started to arc towards the earth along a circular path then finally dropped in another straight line directly towards the earth 8 At the end of Book 2 of Nova Scientia Tartaglia proposes to find the length of that initial rectilinear path for a projectile fired at an elevation of 45 engaging in a Euclidean style argument but one with numbers attached to line segments and areas and eventually proceeds algebraically to find the desired quantity procederemo per algebra in his words 9 Mary J Henninger Voss notes that Tartaglia s work on military science had an enormous circulation throughout Europe being a reference for common gunners into the eighteenth century sometimes through unattributed translations He influenced Galileo as well who owned richly annotated copies of his works on ballistics as he set about solving the projectile problem once and for all 10 Translations editArchimedes works began to be studied outside the universities in Tartaglia s day as exemplary of the notion that mathematics is the key to understanding physics Federigo Commandino reflecting this notion when saying in 1558 that with respect to geometry no one of sound mind could deny that Archimedes was some god 11 Tartaglia published a 71 page Latin edition of Archimedes in 1543 Opera Archimedis Syracusani philosophi et mathematici ingeniosissimi containing Archimedes works on the parabola the circle centres of gravity and floating bodies Guarico had published Latin editions of the first two in 1503 but the works on centres of gravity and floating bodies had not been published before Tartaglia published Italian versions of some Archimedean texts later in life his executor continuing to publish his translations after his death Galileo probably learned of Archimedes work through these widely disseminated editions 12 Tartaglia s Italian edition of Euclid in 1543 Euclide Megarense philosopho was especially significant as the first translation of the Elements into any modern European language For two centuries Euclid had been taught from two Latin translations taken from an Arabic source these contained errors in Book V the Eudoxian theory of proportion which rendered it unusable Tartaglia s edition was based on Zamberti s Latin translation of an uncorrupted Greek text and rendered Book V correctly He also wrote the first modern and useful commentary on the theory 13 This work went through many editions in the sixteenth century and helped diffuse knowledge of mathematics to a non academic but increasingly well informed literate and numerate public in Italy The theory became an essential tool for Galileo as it had been for Archimedes General Trattato di Numeri et Misure edit nbsp General trattato di numeri et misure 1556 Tartaglia exemplified and eventually transcended the abaco tradition that had flourished in Italy since the twelfth century a tradition of concrete commercial mathematics taught at abacus schools maintained by communities of merchants Maestros d abaco like Tartaglia taught not with the abacus but with paper and pen inculcating algorithms of the type found in grade schools today Tartaglia s masterpiece was the General Trattato di Numeri et Misure General Treatise on Number and Measure 14 a 1500 page encyclopedia in six parts written in the Venetian dialect the first three coming out in 1556 about the time of Tartaglia s death and the last three published posthumously by his literary executor and publisher Curtio Troiano in 1560 David Eugene Smith wrote of the General Trattato that it was the best treatise on arithmetic that appeared in Italy in his century containing a very full discussion of the numerical operations and the commercial rules of the Italian arithmeticians The life of the people the customs of the merchants and the efforts at improving arithmetic in the 16th century are all set forth in this remarkable work 15 Part I is 554 pages long and constitutes essentially commercial arithmetic taking up such topics as basic operations with the complex currencies of the day ducats soldi pizolli and so on exchanging currencies calculating interest and dividing profits into joint companies The book is replete with worked examples with much emphasis on methods and rules that is algorithms all ready to use virtually as is 16 Part II takes up more general arithmetic problems including progressions powers binomial expansions Tartaglia s triangle also known as Pascal s triangle calculations with roots and proportions fractions 17 Part IV concerns triangles regular polygons the Platonic solids and Archimedean topics like the quadrature of the circle and circumscribing a cylinder around a sphere 18 Tartaglia s triangle editMain article Tartaglia s triangle nbsp Tartaglia s triangle from General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part II Book 2 p 69 Tartaglia was proficient with binomial expansions and included many worked examples in Part II of the General Trattato one a detailed explanation of how to calculate the summands of 6 4 7 displaystyle 6 4 7 nbsp including the appropriate binomial coefficients 19 Tartaglia knew of Pascal s triangle one hundred years before Pascal as shown in this image from the General Trattato His examples are numeric but he thinks about it geometrically the horizontal line a b displaystyle ab nbsp at the top of the triangle being broken into two segments a c displaystyle ac nbsp and c b displaystyle cb nbsp where point c displaystyle c nbsp is the apex of the triangle Binomial expansions amount to taking a c c b n displaystyle ac cb n nbsp for exponents n 2 3 4 displaystyle n 2 3 4 cdots nbsp as you go down the triangle The symbols along the outside represent powers at this early stage of algebraic notation c e 2 c u 3 c e c e 4 displaystyle ce 2 cu 3 ce ce 4 nbsp and so on He writes explicitly about the additive formation rule that for example the adjacent 15 and 20 in the fifth row add up to 35 which appears beneath them in the sixth row 20 Solution to cubic equations editTartaglia is perhaps best known today for his conflicts with Gerolamo Cardano In 1539 Cardano cajoled Tartaglia into revealing his solution to the cubic equations by promising not to publish them Tartaglia divulged the secrets of the solutions of three different forms of the cubic equation in verse 21 Several years later Cardano happened to see unpublished work by Scipione del Ferro who independently came up with the same solution as Tartaglia Tartaglia had previously been challenged by del Ferro s student Fiore which made Tartaglia aware that a solution existed 22 As the unpublished work was dated before Tartaglia s Cardano decided his promise could be broken and included Tartaglia s solution in his next publication Even though Cardano credited his discovery Tartaglia was extremely upset and a famous public challenge match resulted between himself and Cardano s student Ludovico Ferrari Widespread stories that Tartaglia devoted the rest of his life to ruining Cardano however appear to be completely fabricated 23 Mathematical historians now credit both Cardano and Tartaglia with the formula to solve cubic equations referring to it as the Cardano Tartaglia formula Volume of a tetrahedron edit nbsp 13 14 15 20 18 16 pyramid from the General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part IV Book 2 p 35 Tartaglia was a prodigious calculator and master of solid geometry In Part IV of the General Trattato he shows by example how to calculate the height of a pyramid on a triangular base that is an irregular tetrahedron 24 The base of the pyramid is a 13 14 15 displaystyle 13 14 15 nbsp triangle b c d displaystyle bcd nbsp with edges of length 20 18 displaystyle 20 18 nbsp and 16 displaystyle 16 nbsp rising up to the apex a displaystyle a nbsp from points b displaystyle b nbsp c displaystyle c nbsp and d displaystyle d nbsp respectively Base triangle b c d displaystyle bcd nbsp partitions into 5 12 13 displaystyle 5 12 13 nbsp and 9 12 15 displaystyle 9 12 15 nbsp triangles by dropping the perpendicular from point d displaystyle d nbsp to side b c displaystyle bc nbsp He proceeds to erect a triangle in the plane perpendicular to line b c displaystyle bc nbsp through the pyramid s apex point a displaystyle a nbsp calculating all three sides of this triangle and noting that its height is the height of the pyramid At the last step he applies what amounts to this formula for the height h displaystyle h nbsp of a triangle in terms of its sides p q r displaystyle p q r nbsp the height from side p displaystyle p nbsp to its opposite vertex h 2 r 2 p 2 r 2 q 2 2 p 2 displaystyle h 2 r 2 left p 2 r 2 q 2 over 2p right 2 nbsp a formula deriving from the Law of Cosines not that he cites any justification in this section of the General Trattato Tartaglia drops a digit early in the calculation taking 305 31 49 displaystyle 305 frac 31 49 nbsp as 305 3 49 displaystyle 305 frac 3 49 nbsp but his method is sound The final correct answer is height of pyramid 240 615 3136 displaystyle text height of pyramid sqrt 240 frac 615 3136 nbsp The volume of the pyramid is easily gotten after that not that Tartaglia gives it V 1 3 base height 1 3 Area b c d height 1 3 84 240 615 3136 433 9513222 displaystyle begin aligned V amp 1 3 times text base times text height amp 1 3 times text Area triangle bcd times text height amp 1 3 times 84 times sqrt 240 frac 615 3136 amp approx 433 9513222 end aligned nbsp Simon Stevin invented decimal fractions later in the sixteenth century so the last figure would have been foreign to Tartaglia who always used fractions All the same his approach is in some ways a modern one suggesting by example an algorithm for calculating the height of most or all irregular tetrahedra but as usual for him he gives no explicit formula Works editTartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part I Venice 1556 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part II Venice 1556 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part III Venice 1556 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part IV Venice 1560 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part V Venice 1560 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part VI Venice 1560 Notes edit Stillman Drake Galileo at Work His Scientific Biography Dover 1978 p 3 Strathern 2013 p 189 Masotti Arnoldo Niccolo Tartaglia in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography See Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part IV Book 3 p 43 for the sausage seller Zilsel Edgar The Social Origins of Modern Science p 35 See Valleriani Matteo Metallurgy Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments The Nova Scientia of Nicolo Tartaglia 2013 p 1 Henninger Voss Mary J How the New Science of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos Journal of the History of Ideas 63 3 July 2002 pp 371 397 eviscerated p 376 See Valleriani Matteo Metallurgy Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments The Nova Scientia of Nicolo Tartaglia 2013 pp 169 181 See Valleriani Matteo Metallurgy Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments The Nova Scientia of Nicolo Tartaglia 2013 pp 176 177 See Henninger Voss Mary J How the New Science of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos Journal of the History of Ideas 63 3 July 2002 pp 391 393 for discussion and quotes Clagett Marshall William of Moerbeke Translator of Archimedes pp 356 366 Henninger Voss Mary J New Science of Cannons p 392 See Malet Antoni Euclid s Swan Song Euclid s Elements in Early Modern Europe where Tartaglia s work on Euclid is described as mathematically cogent innovative and influential p 207 Tartaglia Niccolo 1556 1560 Smith 1985 p 298 Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part I Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part II Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part IV See Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part II Book 2 p 51v for expanding 6 4 7 displaystyle 6 4 7 nbsp See Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part II Book 2 p 72 for discussion of the additive rule in Pascal s triangle Katz 1998 p 359 Feldmann Richard W 1961 The Cardano Tartaglia dispute The Mathematics Teacher 54 3 160 163 ISSN 0025 5769 JSTOR 27956338 His student Antonio Maria Fiore knew the solution and attempted to gain a reputation by exploiting his master s discovery He challenged Tartaglia with thirty questions all of which reduced to the solution of x3 ax b Tony Rothman Cardano v Tartaglia The Great Feud Goes Supernatural See Tartaglia Niccolo General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Part IV Book 2 p 35r for the calculation of the height of a 13 14 15 20 18 16 pyramid References editChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Tartaglia Niccolo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press Clagett Marshall 1982 William of Moerbeke Translator of Archimedes Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 126 5 356 366 Henninger Voss Mary J July 2002 How the New Science of Cannons Shook up the Aristotelian Cosmos Journal of the History of Ideas 63 3 371 397 doi 10 1353 jhi 2002 0029 S2CID 170464547 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Nicolo Tartaglia Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Charles Hutton 1815 Tartaglia or Tartaglia Nicholas A philosophical and mathematical dictionary Printed for the author p 482 Katz Victor J 1998 A History of Mathematics An Introduction 2nd ed Reading Addison Wesley Longman ISBN 0 321 01618 1 Malet Antoni 2012 Euclid s Swan Song Euclid s Elements in Early Modern Europe In Olmos Paula ed Greek Science in the Long Run Essays on the Greek Scientific Tradition 4th c BCE 17th c CE Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 205 234 ISBN 978 1 4438 3775 0 Masotti Arnoldo 1970 Niccolo Tartaglia In Gillispie Charles ed Dictionary of Scientific Biography New York Scribner amp American Council of Learned Societies Smith D E 1958 History of Mathematics vol I New York Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 20429 4 Strathern Paul 2013 Venetians New York NY Pegasus Books Tartaglia Niccolo 1543 Opera Archimedis Syracusani philosophi et mathematici ingeniosissimi Venice Tartaglia Niccolo 1543 Euclide Megarense philosopho Venice Tartaglia Niccolo 1556 1560 General Trattato di Numeri et Misure Venice Curtio Troiano Valleriani Matteo 2013 Metallurgy Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments The Nova Scientia of Nicolo Tartaglia Berlin Edition Open Access Max Planck Research Library ISBN 978 3 8442 5258 3 Zilsel Edgar 2000 Raven Diederick Krohn Wolfgang Cohen Robert S eds The Social Origins of Modern Science Springer Netherlands ISBN 0 7923 6457 0 Further reading editValleriani Matteo Metallurgy Ballistics and Epistemic Instruments The Nova scientia of Nicolo TartagliaExternal links editHistory Today Archived 22 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Galileo Project O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Nicolo Tartaglia MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Tartaglia s work and poetry on the solution of the Cubic Equation at Convergence La Nova Scientia Venice 1550 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicolo Tartaglia amp oldid 1181589017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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