Jump to content

Willem 's Gravesande: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
External links: use template
m Removed erroneous space
 
(31 intermediate revisions by 22 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Dutch mathematician and philosopher (1688–1742)}}
{{EngvarB|date=July 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}}
{{Infobox scientist
{{Infobox scientist
|name = Willem 's Gravesande
| name = Willem 's Gravesande
|image = Gravesande.jpg
| image = Gravesande.jpg
|image_size = 220px
| image_size = 220px
|caption = Willem Jacob 's Gravesande (1688–1742)
| caption = Willem Jacob 's Gravesande (1688–1742)
|birth_date = 26 September 1688
| birth_date = 26 September 1688
|birth_place = [['s-Hertogenbosch]], [[Duchy of Brabant]]
| birth_place = [['s-Hertogenbosch]], [[Duchy of Brabant]]
|death_date = {{d-da|28 February 1742|26 September 1688}}
| death_date = {{death-date and age|28 February 1742|26 September 1688}}
|death_place = [[Leiden]], [[Dutch Republic]]
| death_place = [[Leiden]], [[Dutch Republic]]
|residence = [[Netherlands]]
| citizenship =
|citizenship =
| nationality = Dutch
|nationality = [[Netherlands]]
| ethnicity =
|ethnicity =
| field = Philosopher and mathematician
| work_institutions = [[Leiden University]]
|field = [[Philosopher]] and [[mathematician]]
|work_institutions = [[Leiden University]]
| alma_mater = Leiden University
| doctoral_advisor = [[Johannes Voet]]
|alma_mater = Leiden University
| doctoral_students = [[Pieter van Musschenbroek]], [[Jean Allamand]]<!-- <br>[[Govert du Bois]]<br>[[Johannes Oosterdijk Schacht]] to be included when they get their own wiki biography -->
|doctoral_advisor = [[Johannes Voet]]
| known_for = [[kinetic energy|Experimental proof of <math>E_k \propto \begin{matrix} \end{matrix} mv^2 </math>]]
|doctoral_students = [[Pieter van Musschenbroek]], [[Jean Allamand]]<!-- <br>[[Govert du Bois]]<br>[[Johannes Oosterdijk Schacht]] to be included when they get their own wiki biography -->
| author_abbrev_bot =
|known_for = [[kinetic energy|Experimental proof of <math>E_k \propto \begin{matrix} \end{matrix} mv^2 </math>]]
| author_abbrev_zoo =
|author_abbrev_bot =
| prizes =
|author_abbrev_zoo =
|influences = [[Isaac Newton]]
| religion =
|influenced = [[Émilie du Châtelet]]
| footnotes =
|prizes =
| signature =
|religion =
|footnotes =
|signature =
}}
}}
[[Image:WJsGravesande.jpg|{{largethumb}}|'s Gravesande]]
'''Willem Jacob 's Gravesande''' (26 September 1688 – 28 February 1742) was a Dutch mathematician and [[Natural philosophy|natural philosopher]], chiefly remembered for developing experimental demonstrations of the laws of [[classical mechanics]]. As professor of mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy at [[Leiden University]], he helped to propagate [[Isaac Newton]]'s ideas in Continental Europe.


'''Willem Jacob 's Gravesande''' (26 September 1688 – 28 February 1742) was a Dutch mathematician and [[Natural philosophy|natural philosopher]], chiefly remembered for developing experimental demonstrations of the laws of [[classical mechanics]] and the first experimental measurement of [[kinetic energy]]. As professor of mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy at [[Leiden University]], he helped to propagate [[Isaac Newton]]'s ideas in Continental Europe.
==Life==
Born in [['s-Hertogenbosch]], 's Gravesande studied law at [[Leiden University]], where he defended a thesis on [[suicide]] and earned a doctorate in 1707. He then practiced law in [[The Hague]] while also participating in intellectual discussions and cultivating his interest in the mathematical sciences. His ''Essai de perspective'' ("Essay on Perspective"), published in 1711, was praised by the influential Swiss mathematician [[Johann Bernoulli]].<ref name=Knight>[https://books.google.com/books?id=09JPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA331&dq#v=onepage&q=&f=false Google Books] {{cite book | author=Knight, C. | title=Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volumes 21–22 | year=1841 }} Page 331. Retrieved 2009-10-06</ref> In The Hague, 's Gravesande also helped to establish the ''Journal littéraire'' ("Literary journal"), a learned periodical first published in 1713.<ref name="vanHelden">Albert van Helden, [http://www.dwc.knaw.nl/wp-content/berkelbio/15.s'gravesande.pdf "Willem Jacob 's Gravesande, 1688-1742"], in ''A History of Science in The Netherlands'', eds. K. van Berkel, A. van Helden and L. Palm, (Leiden: Brill, 1999), pp. 450-453</ref>


== Life ==
In 1715, 's Gravesande visited [[London]] as part of a Dutch delegation sent to welcome the [[Hanoverian succession]] in Great Britain.<ref name="vanHelden" /> In London, 's Gravesande met both [[George I of Great Britain|King George I]] and [[Isaac Newton]], and was elected a Fellow of the [[Royal Society]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www2.royalsociety.org/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27sgravesande%27%29| title = Library and Archive catalogue|publisher = Royal Society|accessdate = 2012-02-28}}</ref> In 1717 he became professor of [[mathematics]] and [[astronomy]] in Leiden. From that position, he was instrumental in introducing Newton's work to the Netherlands. He also obtained the chairs of civil and military architecture in 1730 and philosophy in 1734.<ref name="vanHelden" /> As a philosopher, he opposed [[Fatalism|fatalists]] like [[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes]] and [[Baruch Spinoza|Spinoza]].
[[File:WJsGravesande.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.7|Portrait of Willem Jacob 's Gravesande. Etching by [[Jacobus Houbraken|J. Houbraken]], after a drawing by {{nowrap|[[Jan Wandelaar|J. Wandelaar]]}}, 1725–1750.]]


Born in [['s-Hertogenbosch]], 's Gravesande studied law at [[Leiden University]], where he defended a thesis on suicide and earned a doctorate in 1707. He then practised law in [[The Hague]] while also participating in intellectual discussions and cultivating his interest in the mathematical sciences. His ''Essai de perspective'' ("Essay on Perspective"), published in 1711, was praised by the influential Swiss mathematician [[Johann Bernoulli]].<ref name=Knight>[https://books.google.com/books?id=09JPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA331 Google Books] {{cite book | author=Knight, C. | title=Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volumes 21–22 | year=1841 }} Page 331. Retrieved 6 October 2009</ref> In The Hague, 's Gravesande also helped to establish the ''Journal littéraire'' ("Literary journal"), a learned periodical first published in 1713.<ref name="vanHelden">Albert van Helden, [http://www.dwc.knaw.nl/wp-content/berkelbio/15.s'gravesande.pdf "Willem Jacob 's Gravesande, 1688–1742"], in ''A History of Science in The Netherlands'', eds. K. van Berkel, A. van Helden and L. Palm, (Leiden: Brill, 1999), pp. 450–453</ref>
's Gravesande was married to Anna Sacrelaire in 1720. They had two sons, both of whom died in adolescence. In 1724, [[Peter the Great]] offered 's Gravesande a position in the new [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Imperial Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences]]. In 1737 he received an offer from [[Frederick the Great]] to join the [[Prussian Academy of Sciences]] in [[Berlin]]. He declined both offers, opting to remain in Leiden.<ref name="vanHelden" />


In 1715, 's Gravesande visited London as part of a Dutch delegation sent to welcome the [[Hanoverian succession]] in Great Britain.<ref name="vanHelden" /> In London, 's Gravesande met both [[George I of Great Britain|King George I]] and [[Isaac Newton]], and was elected a Fellow of the [[Royal Society]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www2.royalsociety.org/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27sgravesande%27%29| title = Library and Archive catalogue|publisher = Royal Society|access-date = 28 February 2012}}</ref> In 1717 he became professor of [[mathematics]] and [[astronomy]] in Leiden. From that position, he was instrumental in introducing Newton's work to the Netherlands. He also obtained the chairs of civil and military architecture in 1730 and philosophy in 1734.<ref name="vanHelden" /> As a philosopher, he opposed [[Fatalism|fatalists]] like [[Thomas Hobbes|Hobbes]] and [[Baruch Spinoza|Spinoza]].
==Mechanics==
Gravesande's main scientific work is ''Physices elementa mathematica, experimentis confirmata, sive introductio ad philosophiam Newtonianam'' ("Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirmed by Experiments; or, an Introduction to Newtonian Philosophy"), published in Leiden in 1720. In that book, he laid the foundations for the teaching of Newtonian mechanics through experimental demonstrations. He presented his work before audiences that included, [[Voltaire]] and [[Albrecht von Haller]], and [[Émilie du Châtelet]] (the translator of Newton's Principia who corrected to incorporate 's Gravesande's discovery of kinetic energy). 's Gravesande's book was soon translated into English by [[John Theophilus Desaguliers]], curator of experiments for the Royal Society.<ref>[http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/library/newton/desaguliers.html "John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683–1744): popularising Newton"], ''Isaac Newton and Newtonianism'', Whipple Library, University of Cambridge</ref>


's Gravesande was married to Anna Sacrelaire in 1720. They had two sons, both of whom died in adolescence. In 1724, [[Peter the Great]] offered 's Gravesande a position in the new [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Imperial Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences]]. In 1737 he received an offer from [[Frederick the Great]] to join the [[Prussian Academy of Sciences]] in Berlin. He declined both offers, opting to remain in Leiden.<ref name="vanHelden" />
In 1721, 's Gravesande became involved in a public controversy over whether the German inventor [[Johann Bessler]], known as Councillor Orffyreus, had created a genuine [[perpetual motion]] machine. 's Gravesande at first argued for the feasibility of perpetual motion based on the conservation of the scalar quantity ''mv'' ([[mass]] multiplied by [[speed]]), which he erroneously believed was implied by Newtonian mechanics.<ref name="Jenkins">{{Cite journal | last1 = Jenkins | first1 = A. | title = The mechanical career of Councillor Orffyreus, confidence man | doi = 10.1119/1.4798617 | journal = American Journal of Physics | volume = 81 | issue = 6 | pages = 421–427 | year = 2013 | pmid =| arxiv = 1301.3097| bibcode = 2013AmJPh..81..421J| pmc = }}</ref> However, in 1722 he published the results of a series of experiments in which brass balls were dropped from varying heights onto a soft clay surface. He found that a ball with twice the speed of another would leave an indentation four times as deep, from which he concluded that the correct expression for the "live force" of a body in motion (what is modernly called its "[[kinetic energy]]") is proportional to ''mv''<sup>2</sup>.<ref name="Jenkins" />


== Mechanics ==
Even though those results invalidated his original argument for the feasibility of perpetual motion, 's Gravesande continued to defend Bessler's work, claiming that Bessler might have discovered some new "active principle" of nature that allowed his wheels to keep turning. Similar views were defended at the time by [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]], Johann Bernoulli, and others, but the modern consensus is that Bessler was perpetrating a deliberate hoax.<ref name="Jenkins" /> Russian Tsar [[Peter the Great]] was interested in Bessler's wheel and sought 's Gravesande's advice on the subject.<ref name="Werrett">{{Cite journal | last1 = Werrett | first1 = S. | doi = 10.1086/657265 | title = The Schumacher Affair: Reconfiguring Academic Expertise across Dynasties in Eighteenth-Century Russia | journal = Osiris | volume = 25 | pages = 104–126 | year = 2010 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref>
[[File:Gravesande-2.jpg|thumb|285x285px|Title page of a 1747 copy of vol. 1 of Gravesande's "''Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy''"]]
Gravesande's main scientific work is ''Physices elementa mathematica, experimentis confirmata, sive introductio ad philosophiam Newtonianam'' ("Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirmed by Experiments; or, an Introduction to Newtonian Philosophy"), published in Leiden in 1720. In that book, he laid the foundations for the teaching of Newtonian mechanics through experimental demonstrations. He presented his work before audiences that included [[Voltaire]], [[Albrecht von Haller]], and [[Émilie du Châtelet]] (the translator of Newton's Principia whose later commentary incorporated 's Gravesande's 1722 experimental discovery of [[kinetic energy]]). 's Gravesande's book was soon translated into English by [[John Theophilus Desaguliers]], curator of experiments for the Royal Society.<ref>[http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/library/newton/desaguliers.html "John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683–1744): popularising Newton"], ''Isaac Newton and Newtonianism'', Whipple Library, University of Cambridge</ref>


's Gravesande communicated his results on the impact of falling weights to [[Émilie du Châtelet]]. Similar observations were published independently by [[Giovanni Poleni]]. The interpretation of 's Gravesande's and Poleni's results led to a controversy with [[Samuel Clarke]] and other Newtonians that became a part of the so-called "[[Vis viva|''vis viva'' dispute]]" in the history of [[classical mechanics]].<ref name="Iltis">{{Cite journal | last1 = Iltis | first1 = C. | title = The Leibnizian-Newtonian Debates: Natural Philosophy and Social Psychology | doi = 10.1017/S000708740001253X | journal = The British Journal for the History of Science | volume = 6 | issue = 4 | pages = 343 | year = 2009 | pmid = | pmc = }}</ref>
In 1721, 's Gravesande became involved in a public controversy over whether the German inventor [[Johann Bessler]], known as Councillor Orffyreus, had created a genuine [[perpetual motion]] machine. 's Gravesande at first argued for the feasibility of perpetual motion based on the conservation of the scalar quantity ''mv'' ([[mass]] multiplied by [[speed]]), which he erroneously believed was implied by Newtonian mechanics.<ref name="Jenkins">{{Cite journal | last1 = Jenkins | first1 = Alejandro | title = The mechanical career of Councillor Orffyreus, confidence man | doi = 10.1119/1.4798617 | journal = American Journal of Physics | volume = 81 | issue = 6 | pages = 421–427 | year = 2013 | arxiv = 1301.3097| bibcode = 2013AmJPh..81..421J | s2cid = 118678318 | author-link = Alejandro Jenkins}}</ref> However, in 1722 he published the results of a series of experiments in which brass balls were dropped from varying heights onto a soft clay surface. He found that two balls of the same size and different masses would make identical indentations when the heights they were dropped from were inversely proportional to their masses, from which he concluded that the correct expression for the "live force" of a body in motion (currently called "[[kinetic energy]]") is proportional to ''mv''<sup>2</sup>.<ref name="Iltis">{{Cite journal | last1 = Iltis | first1 = Carolyn | title = The Leibnizian-Newtonian Debates: Natural Philosophy and Social Psychology | doi = 10.1017/S000708740001253X | journal = The British Journal for the History of Science | volume = 6 | issue = 4 | pages = 343–377 | year = 2009 | s2cid = 144194873 |author-link= Carolyn Merchant}}</ref><ref name="Jenkins" />

Even though those results invalidated his original argument for the feasibility of perpetual motion, 's Gravesande continued to defend Bessler's work, claiming that Bessler might have discovered some new "active principle" of nature that allowed his wheels to keep turning. Similar views were defended at the time by [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]], Johann Bernoulli, and others, but the modern consensus is that Bessler was perpetrating a deliberate hoax.<ref name="Jenkins" /> Russian Tsar [[Peter the Great]] was interested in Bessler's wheel and sought 's Gravesande's advice on the subject.<ref name="Werrett">{{Cite journal | last1 = Werrett | first1 = Simon | doi = 10.1086/657265 | title = The Schumacher Affair: Reconfiguring Academic Expertise across Dynasties in Eighteenth-Century Russia | journal = Osiris | volume = 25 | pages = 104–126 | year = 2010 | s2cid = 145788508 }}</ref>

's Gravesande communicated his results on the impact of falling weights to Émilie du Châtelet. Similar observations were published in 1718 by [[Giovanni Poleni]]. The interpretation of 's Gravesande's and Poleni's results led to a controversy with [[Samuel Clarke]] and other Newtonians that became a part of the so-called "[[Vis viva|''vis viva'' dispute]]" in the history of [[classical mechanics]].<ref name="Iltis"/>


=='s Gravesande's ring==
=='s Gravesande's ring==
[[File:Gravesande ring.png|thumb|180px|thumb|The ring of 's Gravesande]]
[[File:Gravesande ring.png|thumb|180px|The ring of 's Gravesande]]


's Gravesande is also remembered for his invention of a simple experiment demonstrating [[thermal expansion]], which has been used in physics education since. This is known today as "'s Gravesande's experiment" or "'s Gravesande's ring". The apparatus consists of a small metal ball on a chain or handle, and a metal ring on a stand. The ring is just big enough so that when the ring and ball are at the same temperature, the ball fits through the ring. However, if the ball is heated by dipping it into boiling water or playing the flame of a spirit lamp over it, the metal will expand, and the ball will no longer fit through the ring. When the ball has cooled down, it will fit through the ring again.
's Gravesande is also remembered for his invention of a simple experiment demonstrating [[thermal expansion]], which has been used in physics education since. This is known today as "'s Gravesande's experiment" or "'s Gravesande's ring". The apparatus consists of a small metal ball on a chain or handle, and a metal ring on a stand. The ring is just big enough so that when the ring and ball are at the same temperature, the ball fits through the ring. However, if the ball is heated by dipping it into boiling water or playing the flame of a spirit lamp over it, the metal will expand, and the ball will no longer fit through the ring. When the ball has cooled down, it will fit through the ring again.


==Works==
== Works ==
*[https://books.google.com/books?id=ipQ5AAAAcAAJ ''Essai de perspective''], 1711
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=ipQ5AAAAcAAJ ''Essai de perspective''], 1711
*[http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/56ZDQHSF/pageimg ''Philosophiae Newtonianae Institutiones, in usus academicos''], 1723
* [http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/56ZDQHSF/pageimg ''Philosophiae Newtonianae Institutiones, in usus academicos''], 1723
*[http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/N1TU6UZF/pageimg ''An essay on perspective''], 1724
* [http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/N1TU6UZF/pageimg ''An essay on perspective''], 1724
* ''[https://libserv.aip.org/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=1663012000ND5.74106&profile=rev-all&source=~!horizon&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100006~!44147~!3&ri=12&aspect=subtab232&menu=search&ipp=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=Gravesande,+Willem+Jacob+%27s,+1688-1742.&index=PAUTHOR&uindex=&aspect=subtab232&menu=search&ri=12 Mathematical elements of physicks, prov'd by experiments : being an introduction to Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy]'', 1720
*[http://www.historyofscience.nl/search/detail.cfm?pubid=34&view=image&startrow=1 ''Physices elementa mathematica, experimentis confirmata, sive introductio ad philosophiam Newtonianam''], 1720–1721
*[https://books.google.com/books?id=JOUTAAAAQAAJ ''Introductio ad Philosophiam, Metaphysicam et Logicam''], 1736
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=JOUTAAAAQAAJ ''Introductio ad Philosophiam, Metaphysicam et Logicam''], 1736
*[https://archive.org/details/mathematicalelem01grav ''Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirm'd by Experiments: or, An introduction to Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy (Volume I)''], 1747
* [https://archive.org/details/mathematicalelem01grav ''Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirm'd by Experiments: or, An introduction to Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy (Volume I)''], 1747 (first printed in 1720)
*[https://archive.org/details/mathematicalelem02grav ''Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirm'd by Experiments: or, An introduction to Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy (Volume II)''], 1747
* [https://archive.org/details/mathematicalelem02grav ''Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirm'd by Experiments: or, An introduction to Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy (Volume II)''], 1747 (first printed in 1721)
*[http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/W7KYZCD7/pageimg ''Oeuvres Philosophiques et Mathématiques de Mr. G. J. 'sGravesande''], ed. with memoir by J. Allamand, 1774
* [http://echo.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/ECHOdocuView/ECHOzogiLib?mode=imagepath&url=/mpiwg/online/permanent/library/W7KYZCD7/pageimg ''Oeuvres Philosophiques et Mathématiques de Mr. G. J. 'sGravesande''], ed. with memoir by J. Allamand, 1774
<gallery>
File:Gravesande-7.jpg|1720 copy of Gravesande's "''Mathematical Elements of Physicks, Prov’d by Experiments''"
File:Gravesande-8.jpg|Title page of "''Mathematical Elements of Physicks, Prov’d by Experiments''"
File:Gravesande-9.jpg|Preface to "''Mathematical Elements of Physicks, Prov’d by Experiments''"
File:Gravesande-10.jpg|Table from "''Mathematical Elements of Physicks, Prov’d by Experiments''"
</gallery>

== See also ==
* [[9682 Gravesande]], main-belt asteroid named after Willem Jacob Gravesande


==References==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}


==Further reading==
== Further reading ==
* A. R. Hall, {{"'}}s Gravesande, Willem Jacob", in ''Dictionary of Scientific Biography'', vol. V, (New York: 1972), pp.&nbsp;509–11.
* A. R. Hall, {{"'}}s Gravesande, Willem Jacob", in ''Dictionary of Scientific Biography'', vol. V, (New York: 1972), pp.&nbsp;509–11.
* C. de Pater, "Experimental Physics", in ''Leiden University in the Seventeenth Century, An Exchange of Learning'' (Leiden: 1975), pp.&nbsp;308–327.
* C. de Pater, "Experimental Physics", in ''Leiden University in the Seventeenth Century, An Exchange of Learning'' (Leiden: 1975), pp.&nbsp;308–327.


==External links==
== External links ==
{{Commons category|Willem 's Gravesande}}
{{Commons category|Willem 's Gravesande}}
* [http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/modernity/gravesande.html Natural philosophy]
* [http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/modernity/gravesande.html Natural philosophy] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070303101357/http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/libraries/rare/modernity/gravesande.html |date=3 March 2007 }}
* [http://www.hp-gramatke.net/perpetuum/english/page0060.htm 's Gravesande's mistaken belief in perpetuum mobile]
* [http://www.hp-gramatke.net/perpetuum/english/page0060.htm 's Gravesande's mistaken belief in perpetuum mobile]
* [http://www.nypl.org/research/newton/ref/ps_sibl_cd33_540.html 's Gravesande's New York Public Library entry]
* [http://www.nypl.org/research/newton/ref/ps_sibl_cd33_540.html 's Gravesande's New York Public Library entry]
* {{MathGenealogy|112568}}
* {{MathGenealogy|112568}}
* {{MacTutor Biography|id= SGravesande}}
* {{MacTutor Biography|id= SGravesande}}
Line 84: Line 96:
[[Category:1688 births]]
[[Category:1688 births]]
[[Category:1742 deaths]]
[[Category:1742 deaths]]
[[Category:Dutch physicists]]
[[Category:18th-century Dutch physicists]]
[[Category:18th-century Dutch mathematicians]]
[[Category:People from 's-Hertogenbosch]]
[[Category:People from 's-Hertogenbosch]]
[[Category:Leiden University alumni]]
[[Category:Leiden University alumni]]
[[Category:Leiden University faculty]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Leiden University]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society|sGravesande]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society|sGravesande]]

Latest revision as of 20:17, 8 September 2024

Willem 's Gravesande
Willem Jacob 's Gravesande (1688–1742)
Born26 September 1688
Died28 February 1742 (1742-03-01) (aged 53)
NationalityDutch
Alma materLeiden University
Known forExperimental proof of
Scientific career
FieldsPhilosopher and mathematician
InstitutionsLeiden University
Doctoral advisorJohannes Voet
Doctoral studentsPieter van Musschenbroek, Jean Allamand

Willem Jacob 's Gravesande (26 September 1688 – 28 February 1742) was a Dutch mathematician and natural philosopher, chiefly remembered for developing experimental demonstrations of the laws of classical mechanics and the first experimental measurement of kinetic energy. As professor of mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy at Leiden University, he helped to propagate Isaac Newton's ideas in Continental Europe.

Life

[edit]
Portrait of Willem Jacob 's Gravesande. Etching by J. Houbraken, after a drawing by J. Wandelaar, 1725–1750.

Born in 's-Hertogenbosch, 's Gravesande studied law at Leiden University, where he defended a thesis on suicide and earned a doctorate in 1707. He then practised law in The Hague while also participating in intellectual discussions and cultivating his interest in the mathematical sciences. His Essai de perspective ("Essay on Perspective"), published in 1711, was praised by the influential Swiss mathematician Johann Bernoulli.[1] In The Hague, 's Gravesande also helped to establish the Journal littéraire ("Literary journal"), a learned periodical first published in 1713.[2]

In 1715, 's Gravesande visited London as part of a Dutch delegation sent to welcome the Hanoverian succession in Great Britain.[2] In London, 's Gravesande met both King George I and Isaac Newton, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[3] In 1717 he became professor of mathematics and astronomy in Leiden. From that position, he was instrumental in introducing Newton's work to the Netherlands. He also obtained the chairs of civil and military architecture in 1730 and philosophy in 1734.[2] As a philosopher, he opposed fatalists like Hobbes and Spinoza.

's Gravesande was married to Anna Sacrelaire in 1720. They had two sons, both of whom died in adolescence. In 1724, Peter the Great offered 's Gravesande a position in the new Imperial Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences. In 1737 he received an offer from Frederick the Great to join the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin. He declined both offers, opting to remain in Leiden.[2]

Mechanics

[edit]
Title page of a 1747 copy of vol. 1 of Gravesande's "Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy"

Gravesande's main scientific work is Physices elementa mathematica, experimentis confirmata, sive introductio ad philosophiam Newtonianam ("Mathematical Elements of Natural Philosophy, Confirmed by Experiments; or, an Introduction to Newtonian Philosophy"), published in Leiden in 1720. In that book, he laid the foundations for the teaching of Newtonian mechanics through experimental demonstrations. He presented his work before audiences that included Voltaire, Albrecht von Haller, and Émilie du Châtelet (the translator of Newton's Principia whose later commentary incorporated 's Gravesande's 1722 experimental discovery of kinetic energy). 's Gravesande's book was soon translated into English by John Theophilus Desaguliers, curator of experiments for the Royal Society.[4]

In 1721, 's Gravesande became involved in a public controversy over whether the German inventor Johann Bessler, known as Councillor Orffyreus, had created a genuine perpetual motion machine. 's Gravesande at first argued for the feasibility of perpetual motion based on the conservation of the scalar quantity mv (mass multiplied by speed), which he erroneously believed was implied by Newtonian mechanics.[5] However, in 1722 he published the results of a series of experiments in which brass balls were dropped from varying heights onto a soft clay surface. He found that two balls of the same size and different masses would make identical indentations when the heights they were dropped from were inversely proportional to their masses, from which he concluded that the correct expression for the "live force" of a body in motion (currently called "kinetic energy") is proportional to mv2.[6][5]

Even though those results invalidated his original argument for the feasibility of perpetual motion, 's Gravesande continued to defend Bessler's work, claiming that Bessler might have discovered some new "active principle" of nature that allowed his wheels to keep turning. Similar views were defended at the time by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Johann Bernoulli, and others, but the modern consensus is that Bessler was perpetrating a deliberate hoax.[5] Russian Tsar Peter the Great was interested in Bessler's wheel and sought 's Gravesande's advice on the subject.[7]

's Gravesande communicated his results on the impact of falling weights to Émilie du Châtelet. Similar observations were published in 1718 by Giovanni Poleni. The interpretation of 's Gravesande's and Poleni's results led to a controversy with Samuel Clarke and other Newtonians that became a part of the so-called "vis viva dispute" in the history of classical mechanics.[6]

's Gravesande's ring

[edit]
The ring of 's Gravesande

's Gravesande is also remembered for his invention of a simple experiment demonstrating thermal expansion, which has been used in physics education since. This is known today as "'s Gravesande's experiment" or "'s Gravesande's ring". The apparatus consists of a small metal ball on a chain or handle, and a metal ring on a stand. The ring is just big enough so that when the ring and ball are at the same temperature, the ball fits through the ring. However, if the ball is heated by dipping it into boiling water or playing the flame of a spirit lamp over it, the metal will expand, and the ball will no longer fit through the ring. When the ball has cooled down, it will fit through the ring again.

Works

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Google Books Knight, C. (1841). Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volumes 21–22. Page 331. Retrieved 6 October 2009
  2. ^ a b c d Albert van Helden, "Willem Jacob 's Gravesande, 1688–1742", in A History of Science in The Netherlands, eds. K. van Berkel, A. van Helden and L. Palm, (Leiden: Brill, 1999), pp. 450–453
  3. ^ "Library and Archive catalogue". Royal Society. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  4. ^ "John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683–1744): popularising Newton", Isaac Newton and Newtonianism, Whipple Library, University of Cambridge
  5. ^ a b c Jenkins, Alejandro (2013). "The mechanical career of Councillor Orffyreus, confidence man". American Journal of Physics. 81 (6): 421–427. arXiv:1301.3097. Bibcode:2013AmJPh..81..421J. doi:10.1119/1.4798617. S2CID 118678318.
  6. ^ a b Iltis, Carolyn (2009). "The Leibnizian-Newtonian Debates: Natural Philosophy and Social Psychology". The British Journal for the History of Science. 6 (4): 343–377. doi:10.1017/S000708740001253X. S2CID 144194873.
  7. ^ Werrett, Simon (2010). "The Schumacher Affair: Reconfiguring Academic Expertise across Dynasties in Eighteenth-Century Russia". Osiris. 25: 104–126. doi:10.1086/657265. S2CID 145788508.

Further reading

[edit]
  • A. R. Hall, "'s Gravesande, Willem Jacob", in Dictionary of Scientific Biography, vol. V, (New York: 1972), pp. 509–11.
  • C. de Pater, "Experimental Physics", in Leiden University in the Seventeenth Century, An Exchange of Learning (Leiden: 1975), pp. 308–327.
[edit]