"The notion of a "base" can no more be forced upon Bürgi's logarithms than it can be upon the logarithms in Napier's tables. In neither system is \log 1 = 0. Their logarithmic concepts were more general than those of the present day in... that by sliding one progression past the other they could select any positive number at random as the one whose logarithm is zero. We have seen that Napier originally chose \log 10^7 = 0 while Bürgi chose \log 10^8= 0. The logarithms in their tables were integral numbers. More than this, the terms of the two series could be made to increase in the same direction or in opposite directions, at pleasure. That is, if m > n, one can make \log m < \log n , or \log m > \log n , just as one may choose. Napier originally chose the first alternative, Bürgi the second."
Jost Bürgi

January 1, 1970

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