- Jacques de Vaucanson
Jacques de Vaucanson (
February 24 ,1709 –November 21 ,1782 ) was a French inventor, and artist with a mechanical background who is credited with creating the world's first truerobot s, as well as for creating the first completely automatedloom .Early life
He was born in
Grenoble ,France in 1709 as Jacques Vaucanson (the particle "de" was later added to his name by theAcadémie des Sciences [ [http://www.chez.com/soie/vaucans.htm Account by Christiane Lagarrigue] ] ). The tenth child, son of a glove-maker, he grew up poor, and in his youth he reportedly aspired to become a clockmaker . He studied under theJesuit s and later joined the Order of the Minims inLyon . It was his intention at the time to follow a course of religious studies, but he regained his interest in mechanical devices after meeting the surgeon Le Cat, from whom he would learn the details of anatomy. This new knowledge allowed him to develop his first mechanical devices that mimicked biological vital functions such as circulation, respiration, and digestion .Career as Inventor of Automatons
At just 18 years of age, Vaucanson was given his own workshop in
Lyon , and a grant from a nobleman to construct a set of machines. In that same year of 1727, there was a visit from one of the governing heads ofLes Minimes . Vaucanson decided to make some androids. Theautomatons would serve dinner and clear the tables for the visiting politicians. However one government official declared that he thought Vaucanson's tendencies "profane", and ordered that his workshop be destroyed. [Wood, Gabby. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2002/feb/16/extract.gabywood "Living Dolls: A Magical History Of The Quest For Mechanical Life"] , "The Guardian ",2002-2-16 . ]In 1737, Vaucanson built "The Flute Player", a life-size figure of a shepherd that played the tabor and the pipe and had a repertoire of twelve songs. The figure's fingers were not pliable enough to play the flute correctly, so Vaucanson had to glove the creation in skin. The following year, in early 1738, he presented his creation to the
Académie des Sciences [ [http://www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/pynchon/vaucanson.html Essay by Peter Schmidt, Swarthmore College] ] .At the time, mechanical creatures were somewhat a fad inEurope , but most could be classified as toys, and de Vaucanson's creations were recognized as being revolutionary in their mechanical life-like sophistication.Later that year, he created two additional automatons, "The Tambourine Player" and "The Digesting Duck", which is considered his masterpiece. The duck had over 400 moving parts, and could flap its wings, drink water, digest grain, and defecate [ [http://www.swarthmore.edu/Humanities/pschmid1/essays/pynchon/vaucanson.html Vaucanson's Mechanical Duck ] ] . Although Vaucanson's duck supposedly demonstrated digestion accurately, his duck actually contained a hidden compartment of "digested food", so that what the duck defecated was not the same as what it ate. Although such "frauds" were sometimes controversial, they were common enough because such scientific demonstrations needed to entertain the wealthy and powerful to attract their patronage. Vaucanson is credited as having invented the world's first flexible rubber tube while in the process of building the duck's intestines. Despite the revolutionary nature of his automatons, he is said to have tired quickly of his creations and sold them in 1743.
His inventions brought him to the attention of
Frederick II of Prussia , who sought to bring him to his court. Vaucanson refused, however, wishing to serve his own country [ [http://www.chez.com/soie/vaucans.htm vaucanson ] ] .Appointment to French Government
In 1741 he was appointed by Cardinal Fleury, chief minister of Louis XV, as inspector of the manufacture of
silk inFrance . He was charged with undertaking reforms of the silk manufacturing process. At the time, the French weaving industry had fallen behind that ofEngland andScotland . Vaucanson promoted wide-ranging changes for automation of the weaving process. In 1745, he created the world's first completely automated loom, [ [http://www.alyon.org/generale/histoire/france/chronologie/03_chronologie_ancien_regime.html Chronology of Lyon] ] drawing on the work ofBasile Bouchon andJean Falcon . Vaucanson was trying to automate the Frenchtextile industry with punch cards- a technology that, as refined byJoseph-Marie Jacquard more than a half century later, would revolutionize weaving and, in the twentieth century, would be used to inputdata into computers and store information in binary form. His proposals were not well received by weavers, however, who pelted him with stones in the street [cite book|title=Edison's Eve|author=Gaby Wood|date=2002|publisher=Alfred A. Knopf, New York] and many of the more revolutionary ones were largely ignored.He invented several
machine tool s, such as the first fully documented, all metalslide rest lathe, around 1751 (Though Derry & Williams [cite book|title=A short History of Technology|author=T.K. Derry & Trevor I. Williams|date=1960] place this invention around 1768). It was described in theEncyclopédie .In 1746, he was made a member of the
Académie des Sciences [ [http://www.vaucanson.org/lettres/divers/bio_vaucanson.htm Biography at Vaucanson.org (fr)] ] .Legacy
He died in Paris in 1782. Vaucanson left a collection of his work as a bequest to Louis XVI. The collection would become the foundation of the
Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers inParis .His original automatons have all been lost. The flute player and the tambourine player were reportedly destroyed in the Revolution. His proposals for the automation of the weaving process, although ignored during his lifetime, were later perfected and implemented byJoseph Marie Jacquard , the creator of theJacquard loom .Lycee Vaucanson in Grenoble is named in his honor, and trains students for careers in engineering and technical fields.
References
ee also
*
The Turk
* [http://www.miralab.unige.ch/subpages/automates/eightennth/vaucanson_uk.htm Jacques de Vaucanson]
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