"[G]lory has been reserved to our era and to the English people, who since the instauration of the sciences have made such advances... And passing over the immense labours undergone by the most fruitful astronomers of our people... [H]ow easy and how exact... how geometrical, astronomy has been left to us by that most acute geometer... or astronomer, the Right Reverend Dr Seth sometime Bishop of Salisbury, who while he was among men adorned this chair. How geometrically and acutely he determined the positions and species of the orbit and other related matters, following Kepler and substituting as mean motion the angle at the other focus (which he accordingly called that of the mean motion) in place of the areas to the sun that the radius vector describes and as it were sweeps out. Content with this artifice he did not detain himself over the solution of Kepler’s problem, in which the division of the area of an ellipse in a given ratio by a straight line through a focus is required. But, being a most perspicacious man, he was conscious of what delays arose hence in the construction of tables, and, in order to show the world that astronomy was to be advanced by the help of geometry whatever hypotheses it depended upon, he accomplished the same astronomical problems geometrically from the circular hypothesis."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Fellows of the Royal SocietyMathematicians from EnglandAcademics from the United KingdomAstronomers from EnglandUniversity of Edinburgh alumni
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/David_Gregory_(mathematician)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
David Gregory (mathematician)
David Gregory (originally spelt Gregorie) FRS (3 June 1659 – 10 October 1708) was a Scottish mathematician and astronomer. He was professor of mathematics at the , and later at the University of Oxford, and a proponent of Isaac Newton's '.
52 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by David Gregory (mathematician) →
Related Quotes
"[I]t is by the help of geometry that all the arts necessary for improving life,.. as geography,.. rules of navigation…"
"[W]ithin the memory of ourselves and... our fathers, philosophers began to extend the limits of geometry in order to …"
"It is... most gratifying to my soul that, after spending a large part of my life in other universities, I can be link…"
"[T]he easier, simpler and less composite these theories are, the more they will be consonant not only with what has a…"
"In the past many very base Remus’s leapt over the walls of the astronomical city, but now the geometers have so forti…"
"[W]hat sharpness of mind was employed by John Kepler... when, from there being just five regular solids... he inferre…"
"After great and fruitful efforts both in the purer geometry and the more intricate and complex physics, the most skil…"
"After Kepler’s bold and fruitful efforts to advance natural philosophy by the help of geometry, there should have app…"
"[W]e have come into the age where questions that were once cosmographical are being transformed into geometrical prob…"
"Although in every age there have been those who cultivated astronomy, either by... observations... or by theories and…"