- Giordano Vitale
Giordano Vitale or Vitale Giordano (
October 15 ,1633 –November 3 ,1711 ), was an Italian mathematician. He is best known for his theorem on Saccheri quadrilaterals. He is also referred to as Vitale Giordani, Vitale Giordano da Binoto, and simply Giordano.Life
Giordano was born in
Bitonto , in southeasternItaly , probably on October 15, 1633. As an adolescent he left (or was forced to leave) his city and, after an adventurous youth (that included killing his brother-in-law for calling him lazy) he became a soldier in the Pontifical army. During these adventures he read his first book of mathematics, the "Aritmetica prattica" by Clavius. At twenty-eight, living in Rome, he decided to devote himself to mathematics. The most important book he studied was Euclid's "Elements" in the Italian translation by Commandino.In Rome he made acquaintance with the renowned mathematicians Giovanni Borelli and
Michelangelo Ricci , who became his friends. He was employed for a year as a mathematician by ex-QueenChristina of Sweden during her final stay in Rome. In 1667, a year after its foundation byLouis XIV , he became a lecturer in mathematics at theFrench Academy in Rome , and in 1685 he gained the chair of mathematics at the prestigiousSapienza University of Rome . Friend ofVincenzo Viviani , Giordano metLeibniz in Rome when Leibniz stayed there during his journey through Italy in the years 1689–90. He gave Leibniz a copy of the second edition of his book "Euclide restituto". Giordano died on November 3, 1711, and was buried in theSan Lorenzo in Damaso basilica church in Rome.Work
Giordano is most noted nowadays for a theorem on Saccheri quadrilaterals that he proved in his 1668 book "Euclide restituo" (named after Borelli's "Euclides Restitutus" of 1658).
In examining Borelli's proof of the
parallel postulate , Giordano noted that it depended upon the assumption that a line everywhere equidistant from a straight line is itself straight. This in turn is due toClavius , whose proof of the assumption in his 1574 "Commentary on Euclid" is faulty. [ [T. L. Heath (1908), "The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements, Vol. 1", p.194, University Press, Cambridge] ] [ [George Bruce Halsted (1920), translator's preface to Saccheri's "Euclides Vindicatus", p.ix, The Open Court Publishing Company, Chicago] ] So using a figure he found in Clavius, now called a Saccheri quadrilateral, Giordano tried to come up with his own proof of the assumption, in the course of which he proved::If ABCD is a Saccheri quadrilateral (angles A and B right angles, sides AD and BC equal) and HK is any perpendicular from DC to AB, then
:*(i) the angles at C and D are equal, and:*(ii) if in addition HK is equal to AD, then angles C and D are right angles, and DC is equidistant from AB.
The interesting bit is the second part (the first part had already been proved by
Omar Khayyám in the 11th century), which can be restated as::If 3 points of a line CD are equidistant from a line AB then all points are equidistant.
Which is the first real advance in understanding the
parallel postulate in 600 years. [ [Roberto Bonola (1912), "Non-Euclidean Geometry", p.15, The Open Court Publishing Company, Chicago] ] [ [George Edward Martin (1998), "The Foundations of Geometry and the Non-Euclidean Plane", p.272, Springer] ]Publications
Giordano's published work includes:
*"Lexicon mathematicum astronomicum geometricum" (1st edition 1668, Paris. 2nd edition with additions 1690, Rome)
*"Euclide restituto, ovvero gli antichi elementi geometrici ristaurati e facilitati da Vitale Giordano da Bitonto. Libri XV." ("Euclid Restored, or the ancient geometric elements rebuilt and facilitated by Giordano Vitale, 15 Books"), (1st edition 1680, Rome. 2nd edition with additions 1686, Rome)
*"Fundamentum doctrinae motus grauium et comparatio momentorum grauis in planis seiunctis ad grauitationes" (1689, Rome)Notes
References
*M. Teresa Borgato, manoscritti non pubblicati di Vitale Giordano, corrispondente di Leibniz.
*Leibniz Tradition und Aktualitat V. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, unter der Schirmherrschaft des Niedersachsischen Ministerprasidenten Dr. Ernst Albrecht, Vortrage Hannover 14–19 November 1988.
*Francisco Tampoia, Vitale Giordano, Un matematico bitontino nella Roma barocca, Arming Publisher Rome 2005.External links
*Roberto Bonola (1912) [http://www.archive.org/details/noneuclideangeom00bonorich Non-Euclidean Geometry] , Open Court, Chicago. English translation by H. S. Carslaw.
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