"According to Bramer, his kinsman had calculated tables... more than twenty years before 1630. As he has not fixed the date, we take the assumption as referring to the year 1609. "But," says Kepler, writing in... 1624, and without the slightest notice of Byrgius, "a certain Scotchman, so early as the year 1594, wrote to Tycho a promise of that wonderful canon." According to Bramer, his kinsman, the "homo cunctator," [a hesitant man] did so far bestir himself as to have his portrait engraved, in the year 1619, for a frontispiece to his great discoveries, among which, and probably the least, were the Logarithms! In 1620 the fragment of his tables was printed at Prague, but without frontispiece or anything else."
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Jost Bürgi
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