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Simon Stevin


 
 

Simon Stevin was a FlemishFlemish people

The term Flemings is currently mostly used to refer to the ethnic group native to Flanders, which in total numbers about 6 m...
 mathematicianMathematician

A mathematician is a person whose primary area of study and research is the field of mathematics....
 and engineerEngineer

An engineer is someone who is trained or professionally engaged in a branch of engineering....
. He was active in a great many areas of science and engineering, both theoretical and practical. He also translated various mathematical terms into DutchDutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 22 million people, mainly in the Netherlands and Belgium . ...
, making it one of the few European languages in which the word for mathematicsMathematics

Mathematics is the discipline that deals with concepts such as quantity, structure, space and change....
, wiskunde, was not derived from GreekGreek language

Greek has a documented history of 3,500 years, the longest of any single language within the Indo-European family....
 (via LatinLatin Summary

Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in Latium, the region immediately surrounding Rome....
).
BiographyStevin was born in BrugesBruges

Bruges is the historic capital of the province of West Flanders, Flanders being one of the three regions of Belgium....
, Flanders (now BelgiumBelgium Summary

The Kingdom of Belgium is a country in northwest Europe bordered by the Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg and France and is...
) in the year 1548 by Antheunis Stevin and Cathelyne van der Poort. Very little has been recorded about his life. Even the exact date of birth and the date and place of his death are uncertain. It is known that he left a widow with two children; and one or two hints scattered throughout his works inform us that he began life as a merchant's clerk in AntwerpAntwerp

The city and municipality of Antwerp is a centre of commerce in Flanders and Belgium and the capital of Antwerp province, i...
, that he travelled in PolandPoland

Poland , officially the Republic of Poland , is a country located in Central Europe....
, DenmarkDenmark

The Kingdom of Denmark is the smallest and southernmost of the Nordic countries....
 and other parts of northern Europe.






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Timeline

1548   Born

1586   Simon Stevin, a Dutch mathematician demonstrates that two objects of different weight fall with the same speed.






Encyclopedia



Simon Stevin was a FlemishFlemish people

The term Flemings is currently mostly used to refer to the ethnic group native to Flanders, which in total numbers about 6 m...
 mathematicianMathematician

A mathematician is a person whose primary area of study and research is the field of mathematics....
 and engineerEngineer

An engineer is someone who is trained or professionally engaged in a branch of engineering....
. He was active in a great many areas of science and engineering, both theoretical and practical. He also translated various mathematical terms into DutchDutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 22 million people, mainly in the Netherlands and Belgium . ...
, making it one of the few European languages in which the word for mathematicsMathematics

Mathematics is the discipline that deals with concepts such as quantity, structure, space and change....
, wiskunde, was not derived from GreekGreek language

Greek has a documented history of 3,500 years, the longest of any single language within the Indo-European family....
 (via LatinLatin Summary

Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in Latium, the region immediately surrounding Rome....
).

Biography

Stevin was born in BrugesBruges

Bruges is the historic capital of the province of West Flanders, Flanders being one of the three regions of Belgium....
, Flanders (now BelgiumBelgium Summary

The Kingdom of Belgium is a country in northwest Europe bordered by the Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg and France and is...
) in the year 1548 by Antheunis Stevin and Cathelyne van der Poort. Very little has been recorded about his life. Even the exact date of birth and the date and place of his death are uncertain. It is known that he left a widow with two children; and one or two hints scattered throughout his works inform us that he began life as a merchant's clerk in AntwerpAntwerp

The city and municipality of Antwerp is a centre of commerce in Flanders and Belgium and the capital of Antwerp province, i...
, that he travelled in PolandPoland

Poland , officially the Republic of Poland , is a country located in Central Europe....
, DenmarkDenmark

The Kingdom of Denmark is the smallest and southernmost of the Nordic countries....
 and other parts of northern Europe. After his travels, he became advisor and teacher of Prince Maurice of Nassau, who asked his advice on many occasions, and made him a public officer—at first director of the so-called "waterstaet" (the government authority for public works), and later quartermaster-general.

In Bruges there is a Simon Stevin Square which contains his statue by Eugen Simonis.

Discoveries and inventions

His claims to fame are varied. His contemporaries were most struck by his invention of a so-called land yachtLand sailing Overview

Land sailing is motion across land in a wheeled vehicle powered by wind through the use of a sail....
, a carriage with sails, of which a little model had been preserved in ScheveningenScheveningen Summary

...
 until 1802. The carriage itself had been lost long before. Around the year 1600 Stevin, with Prince Maurice of Orange and twenty-six others, made use of it on the beach between Scheveningen and Petten. The carriage was propelled solely by the force of wind, and acquired a speed which exceeded that of horses.

Philosophy of science

Stevin had developed a theory about a bygone age of wisdom, for which even Hugo GrotiusHugo Grotius

Hugo Grotius worked as a jurist in the Dutch Republic and laid the foundations for international law, based on natural law....
 gave him great credit. Stevin's goal was to bring about a second age of wisdom, in which mankind would have recovered all of its earlier knowledge. He had deduced that the language spoken in this age would have had to be Dutch, because, as he had showed empirically, in that language, more concepts could be indicated with monosyllabic words than in any of the (European) languages he had compared it with. This was one of the reasons why he wrote all of his works in Dutch and left translations to others. The other reason was that he wanted his works to be practically useful to people who had not mastered the common scientific language of the time, Latin.

GeometryGeometry

Geometry arose as the field of knowledge dealing with spatial relationships....
 and physicsPhysics

Physics , the most fundamental physical science, is concerned with the underlying principles of the natural world....
 

Stevin was the first to show how to model regular and semiregular polyhedraPolyhedra

Polyhedra may mean:* Polyhedra DBMS, a relational database system...
 by delineating their frames in a plane. Stevin also distinguished stable from unstable equilibria. He proved the law of the equilibrium on an inclined plane, using an ingenious and intuitive diagram showing a rope containing evenly spaced beads draped over an inclined plane (see the illustration on the side). The diagram is said to have been inscribed on his tombstone, leading the physicist Richard FeynmanRichard Feynman

Richard Phillips Feynman was an influential American physicist known for expanding greatly on the theory of quantum electr...
 to remark to his students, "If you get an inscription like that on your tombstone, you are doing fine!"

He demonstrated the resolution of forces before Pierre VarignonPierre Varignon

Pierre Varignon was a French mathematician....
, which had not been remarked previously, even though it is a simple consequence of the law of their composition.

Stevin discovered the hydrostatic paradox, which states that the downward pressure of a liquid is independent of the shape of the vessel, and depends only on its height and base.

He also gave the measure for the pressure on any given portion of the side of a vessel.

He was the first to explain the tides using the attraction of the moon.

In 1586, he demonstrated that two objects of different weight fall down with exactly the same acceleration.

Music theory

Stevin was the first author in the West to give a mathematically accurate specification for equal temperamentEqual temperament

An equal temperament is a musical temperament, or system of tuning, in which an interval, usually the octave, is divided int...
. He appears to have been inspired by the writings of the Italian lutenist and musical theorist Vincenzo GalileiVincenzo Galilei Summary

Vincenzo Galilei was an Italian lutenist, composer, and music theorist, and the father of the famous astronomer and physicis...
 (father of Galileo GalileiGalileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei was an Italian physicist, astronomer, astrologer and philosopher who is closely associated with the scienti...
), a onetime pupil of Gioseffo ZarlinoGioseffo Zarlino Overview

Gioseffo Zarlino, was an Italian music theorist and composer of the Renaissance....
.

Bookkeeping

Bookkeeping by double entry may have been known to Stevin, as he was a clerk in AntwerpAntwerp

The city and municipality of Antwerp is a centre of commerce in Flanders and Belgium and the capital of Antwerp province, i...
 in his younger years, either practically or through the medium of the works of Italian authors such as Luca PacioliLuca Pacioli

Fra Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli was an Italian mathematician and Franciscan friar, collaborator with Leonardo da Vinci, and...
 and Gerolamo CardanoGerolamo Cardano

Gerolamo Cardano or Girolamo Cardano, in English Jerome Cardan, or in Latin Hieronymus Cardanus was a cel...
. However, Stevin was the first to recommend the use of impersonal accounts in the national household. He brought it into practice for Prince Maurice, and recommended it to the French statesman SullyMaximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully

Maximilien de Bthune, duc de Sully was the doughty soldier, French minister, staunch Protestant and faithful right-hand man ...
.

Decimal fractions

Stevin wrote a 36 page bookletBooklet

*A booklet is a small book.*Postage stamps may be purchased in small groups known as "booklets"; see postage stamp booklet....
 called De Thiende ('the tenth'), first published in Dutch in 1585, though the French translation "Disme" The sub-title: teaching how all computations that are made in business may be performed by integers without the aid of fractions doesn't exceed seven pages was referencing unit fractions or Egyptian fractions.

Decimal fractions had been employed for the extraction of square roots some five centuries before his time, but nobody established their daily use before Stevin. He felt that this innovation was so significant, that he declared the universal introduction of decimal coinage, measures and weights to be merely a question of time.

His notation is rather unwieldy. The point separating the integers from the decimal fractions seems to be the invention of Bartholomaeus PitiscusBartholomaeus Pitiscus

Bartholomaeus Pitiscus was a Silesian trigonometrist, astronomer, and theologian....
, in whose trigonometrical tables (1612) it occurs and it was accepted by John NapierJohn Napier Overview

John Napier or Neper, nicknamed Marvellous Merchiston was a Scottish mathematician, physicist, astronomer/astro...
 in his logarithmic papers.

Stevin printed little circles around the exponents of the different powers of one-tenth. That Stevin intended these encircled numerals to denote mere exponents is clear from the fact that he employed the very same symbol for powers of algebraic quantities. He didn't avoid fractional exponents; only negative exponents don't appear in his work.

Stevin wrote on other scientific subjects—for instance optics, geography, astronomy—and a number of his writings were translated into Latin by W. Snellius. There are two complete editions in French of his works, both printed in Leiden, one in 1608, the other in 1634.

Neologisms

Stevin thought the Dutch languageDutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 22 million people, mainly in the Netherlands and Belgium . ...
 to be excellent for scientific writing, and he translated a lot of the mathematical terms to Dutch. As a result, Dutch is one of the few Western European languages that have a lot of mathematical terms that do not stem from Latin. This includes the very name Wiskunde (Mathematics).

His eye for the importance of having the scientific language be the same as the language of the craftsmen may show from the dedication of his book De Thiende ('The Disme' or 'The Tenth'): 'Simon Stevin wishes the stargazers, surveyors, carpet measurers, body measurers in general, coin measurers and tradespeople good luck.' Further on in the same pamphlet, he writes: "[this text] teaches us all calculations that are needed by the people without using fractions. One can reduce all operations to adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing with integers."

Some of the words he invented evolved: 'aftrekken' (subtract) and 'delen' (divide) stayed the same, but over time 'menigvuldigen' became 'vermenigvuldigen' (multiply, the added 'ver' has no meaning). 'Vergaderen' became 'optellen' (add).

Another example is the Dutch word for diameter: 'middellijn', lit.: line through the middle.

The word 'zomenigmaal' (quotient lit. 'that many times') has become the perhaps less poetic 'quotiënt' in modern day Dutch.

Other terms did not make it into modern day mathematical Dutch, like 'teerling' (dieDice

A die is a small polyhedral object, usually cubical, used for generating random numbers or other symbols....
, although still being used in the meaning as die), instead of cube.
his books where best sellers.

Publications

Amongst others, he published:
  • Tafelen van Interest (Tables of interest) in 1582;
  • Problemata geometrica in 1583;
  • De Thiende (La Theinde, The tenth) in 1585 in which decimals were introduced in Europe;
  • La pratique d'arithmétique in 1585;
  • L'arithmétique in 1585 in which he presented a uniform treatment for solving algebraic equationsAlgebraic geometry

    Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics which, as the name suggests, combines abstract algebra, especially commutative...
    ;
  • De Beghinselen der Weeghconst in 1586, accompanied by De Weeghdaet;
  • De Beghinselen des Waterwichts (Principles on the weight of water) in 1586 on the subject of hydrostatics;
  • Vita Politica. Named Burgherlick leven (Civil life) in 1590;
  • De Stercktenbouwing (The construction of fortifications) published in 1594;
  • De Havenvinding published in 1599;
  • De Hemelloop in 1608;
  • Wiskonstighe Ghedachtenissen (Mathematical Memoirs). This included earlier works like De Driehouckhandel, De Meetdaet, and De Deursichtighe|Perspective]]);
  • Castrametatio, dat is legermeting and Nieuwe Maniere van Stercktebou door Spilsluysen (New ways of building of sluiceSluice

    A sluice is a water channel that is controlled at its head by a gate....
    s) published in 1617;
  • De Spiegheling der Singconst (Theory of the art of singing).

External links

  • contains an HTML version (including hyperlinks to explanations) of De Thiende and its translations into English, French and Swedish, and scans of these books
  • contains a lot more information about Simon Stevin
  • is the text of the Catholic Encyclopedia about Stevin. The author can hardly conceal his admiration, and for the rest the article is mostly a bibliography of Stevin's work.
  • is a short essay on Simon Stevin by S. Abbas Raza at
  • is an Internet bibliography regarding Simon Stevin.
  • treats Stevin's use of the rule of false position.


Further reading

  • Virtually all of Stevin's writings have been published in five volumes with introduction and analysis in: The Principal Works are available online at .
  • Another good source about Stevin is the French-language bundle:
  • A recent work on Simon Stevin in Dutch is:

Trivia

The study association of mechanical engineering at the Technische Universiteit EindhovenEindhoven University of Technology

The Eindhoven University of Technology is a university of technology located in Eindhoven, the Netherlands....
, is named after Simon Stevin. In Stevin's memory, the association has called its bar "De Weeghconst" and owns a self-built fleet of land yachtLand yacht

For the term landyacht associated with large passenger vehicles see Landyacht....
s.