- Jean-Baptiste Morin
Jean-Baptiste Morin (
February 23 ,1583 —November 6 ,1656 ), also known by hisLatin pseudonym as Morinus, was a French mathematician, astrologer, and astronomer. Born inVillefranche, Yonne , in theBeaujolais , he began studyingphilosophy atAix-en-Provence at the age of 16. He studiedmedicine atAvignon in 1611 and received his medical degree two years later. He was employed by the Bishop of Boulogne from 1613 to 1621 and was sent toGermany andHungary during this time. He served thebishop as anastrologer and also visited mines and studiedmetal s. He subsequently worked for the Duke of Luxembourg until 1629. Morin published a defense ofAristotle in 1624. He also worked in the field ofoptics , and continued to study inastrology . He worked withPierre Gassendi on observational astronomy.In 1630, Morin was appointed professor of mathematics at the
Collège Royal , a post he held until his death.A firm believer of the idea that the
Earth remained fixed in space, Morin is best known for being opponent ofGalileo and the latter's ideas. He continued his attacks after theTrial of Galileo . Morin seems to have been a rather contentious figure, as he also attackedDescartes ' ideas after meeting the philosopher in 1638. These disputes isolated Morin from the scientific community at large.Morin believed that improved methods of solving spherical triangles had to be found and that better lunar tables were needed.
Morin and longitude
Morin attempted to solve the
longitude problem. In 1634, he proposed his solution: it was based on measuring absolute time by the position of theMoon relative to the stars. It was a variation of the lunar distance method. Morin added some improvements to this method, such as better scientific instruments and taking lunarparallax into account. Morin did not believe that Gemma Frisius' transporting clock method for calculating out longitude would work. Morin, unfailingly irascible, remarked, "I do not know if the Devil will succeed in making a longitude timekeeper but it is folly for man to try." [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PrintHT/Longitude1.html]A prize was to be awarded, so a committee was set up by Richelieu to evaluate Morin's proposal. Serving on this committee were
Étienne Pascal ,Claude Mydorge , andPierre Hérigone . The committee remained in dispute with Morin for the five years after he made his proposal. Morin refused to listen to objections to his proposal, which was considered impractical. In his attempts to convince the committee members, Morin proposed that anobservatory be set up in order to provide accurate lunar data. He wrangled with the committee for five years.In 1645,
Cardinal Mazarin , Richelieu's successor, awarded Morin a pension of 2,000livres for his work on the longitude problem.Morin and astrology
Perhaps most famous for his work as an
astrologer , towards the end of his life Morin completedAstrologia Gallica (French Astrology), a treatise which he did not live to see in print. The 26 books of intricate, complex, Latin text were published at the Hague in 1661 as one thick folio 850 pages long. The work covers natal, judicial, mundane, electional and meteorological astrology, and parts that are most concerned with astrological techniques (as compared to theological discussion on which they are based) have been translated or paraphrased into French, Spanish, German, and English.At least among English-speaking astrologers, Morin is known as having been particularly concerned with prediction through methodical extrapolation of what is promised in the natal chart. His techniques were
directions , solar andlunar return, and he regarded transits a subsidiary technique though one key to accurate timing of events nonetheless.Morin challenged much of classical astrological theory, including the astrology of
Ptolemy , in an attempt to present a solid set of tools while rendering reasons for and against particular techniques, some of which may be considered crucial to many astrologers before and during Morin’s lifetime. At the same time, Morin vested himself heavily in promoting "in mundo" directions, a technique largely based on the work ofRegiomontanus that became available thanks to then-recent advancement in mathematics. In his work, Morin provides examples of successful delineation of events that otherwise could not be delineated with the same relative degree of certainty.Morin’s life has been that of trial and tribulation by his own testament. He died in Paris of natural causes at 73 years of age.
Further reading
[http://www.skyscript.co.uk/morin.html The Astrology of Jean-Baptiste Morin by Thomas Callanan]
ources
*MacTutor Biography|id=Morin_Jean-Baptiste
* [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PrintHT/Longitude1.html Longitude]
* [http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/morin.html The Galileo Project]
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