Difference between revisions of "Nicole Oresme" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Oresme.jpg|right|thumb|270px|right|Portrait of Nicole Oresme: Miniature of Nicole Oresme's ''Traité de l’espere'', Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, France, fonds français 565, fol. 1r.]]
 
[[Image:Oresme.jpg|right|thumb|270px|right|Portrait of Nicole Oresme: Miniature of Nicole Oresme's ''Traité de l’espere'', Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, France, fonds français 565, fol. 1r.]]
'''Nicole Oresme''' or '''Nicolas d'Oresme''' (c. [[1323]] - [[July 11]], [[1382]]) was an economist, mathematician, physicist, astronomer, philosopher, psychologist, and musicologist, a passionate theologian and Bishop of [[Lisieux]], a competent translator, counselor of King [[Charles V of France]], one of the principal founders<ref>The formulations "founder", "anticipation" etc. in this biography could misunderstand in the sense of an anachronism. But in Taschow’s theory of [[evolutionary consciousness]] (see Taschow, Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne) is no place for an idea of linear evolution that would be the decisive condition for a view of anachronism.</ref> and popularizers of modern sciences, and probably one of the most original thinkers of the 14th century.
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'''Nicole Oresme''' or '''Nicolas d'Oresme''' (c.1323 - July 11, 1382) was probably one of the most original thinkers of the 14th century, generating concepts and ideas which anticipated the scientific breakthroughs of scientists centuries later.  An economist, mathematician, physicist, astronomer, philosopher, psychologist, and musicologist, he was also a passionate theologian and Bishop of Lisieux.  He served as counselor of King [[Charles V of France]], and at his behest translated several works of Aristotle into French and wrote numerous works in French popularizing science and learning.
 
 
 
== Oresme's life ==
 
== Oresme's life ==
Nicole Oresme: ''Therefore, I indeed know nothing except that I know that I know nothing.''<ref> Nicole Oresme, ''Quodlibeta'', MS Paris, BN lat. 15126, 98v.</ref>
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<blockquote> ''Therefore, I indeed know nothing except that I know that I know nothing.'' ''Quodlibeta'', MS Paris, BN lat. 15126, 98v</blockquote>
  
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NicoleOresme was born c.1320-1325 in the village of Allemagne ([http://www.fleurysien.com/fleury/index_fleury.php] today's [[Fleury-sur-Orne]]) in the vicinity of  Caen, [[Normandy]], in the Diocese of Bayeux.  Nothing is known about his family except that he was of Norman descent. Oresme attended the royally sponsored and subsidized [[College of Navarre]], an institution for students too poor to pay their expenses while studying at the [[University of Paris]], indicates that he probably came from a peasant family.
  
Oresme was born c. 1320-1325 in the village of Allemagne ([http://www.fleurysien.com/fleury/index_fleury.php] today's [[Fleury-sur-Orne]]) in the vicinity of [[Caen]], [[Normandy]], in the Diocese of [[Bayeux]]. Practically nothing is known concerning his family. The fact that Oresme attended the royally sponsored and subsidized [[College of Navarre]], an institution for students too poor to pay their expenses while studying at the [[University of Paris]], makes it probable that he came from a peasant family.
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Oresme studied the “artes” in Paris before 1342, together with [[Jean Buridan]] (often called founder of the French school of natural philosophy), [[Albert of Saxony (philosopher)|Albert of Saxony]] and perhaps [[Marsilius of Inghen]], and there received the Magister Artium. A recently discovered papal letter of provision granting Oresme an expectation of a benefice establishes that he was already a regent master in arts by 1342. This early dating of Oresme's arts degree places him at Paris during the crisis over [[William of Ockham]]'s natural philosophy.
  
Oresme studied the “artes” in Paris (before 1342), together with [[Jean Buridan]] (the so-called founder of the French school of natural philosophy), [[Albert of Saxony (philosopher)|Albert of Saxony]] and perhaps [[Marsilius of Inghen]], and there received the [[Magister Artium]]. A recently discovered papal letter of provision granting Oresme an expectation of a benefice establishes that he was already a regent master in arts by 1342. This early dating of Oresme's arts degree places him at Paris during the crisis over [[William of Ockham]]'s natural philosophy.
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In 1348, he was a student of theology in Paris; in 1356, he received his doctorate and in the same year he became grand master (grand-maître) of the [[College of Navarre]]
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Many of his most thoughtful Latin treatises antedate 1360, and show that Oresme was already an established schoolman of the highest reputation.  He attracted the attention of the royal family, and was brought into intimate contact with the future [[Charles V of France|Charles V]] in 1356.  Charles began to act as regent in 1356, while his father John II was in captivity in England, and from 1364 until 1380, was King of France.  On November 2, 1359, Oresme became "secretaire du roi" and upon Charles’ coronation on April 8, 1364, he became chaplain and counselor to the king.  Charles appears to have had the highest esteem for Oresme’s character and talents, often followed his counsel, and made him write many works in French for the purpose of popularizing the sciences and of developing a taste for learning in the kingdom. At Charles’s insistence Oresme delivered a discourse before the papal court at Avignon, denouncing the ecclesiastical disorder of the time.  As an intimate friend and advisor to King Charles, "Le Sage", until his death in 1380, Oresme was in a position to influence Charles’ progressive political, economical, ethical and philosophical thinking. Oresme was the most important of a circle of intellectuals, including [[Raoul de Presle]] and [[Philippe de Mézières]], at Charles’ court.
  
In 1348, he was a student of theology in Paris, in 1356, he received his doctorate and in the same year he became grand master (grand-maître) of the [[College of Navarre]].
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Oresme, as the grand master of Navarre, was sent by the dauphin to seek a loan from the municipal authorities of Rouen in 1356 and then in 1360. Oresme, while still grand master of Navarre, was appointed archdeacon of [[Bayeux]] with the support of Charles in 1361. It is known that Oresme unwillingly surrendered the interesting post of grand master.  Charles may have influenced his father, King John II, to grant Oresme a series of increasingly important appointments. On November 23, 1362, the year he became master of theology, Oresme was appointed canon of the Cathedral of Rouen. At the time of this appointment, he was still teaching regularly at the University of Paris.  On February 10, 1363, he was made a canon at La Saint Chapelle, given a semiprebend and on March 18, 1364, and was elevated to the post of dean of the Cathedral of Rouen.
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During his tenure in these successive posts at the Cathedral of Rouen (1364-1377), documents related to affairs of the University show that Oresme spent considerable time in Paris, but it not known if he also continued to teach there. Letters sent by Charles to Rouen from August 28 to November 11, 1372, indicate that Oresme began working on translations at the request of the king, and took up residence in Paris.  Oresme began his translation of [[Aristotle]]’s ''Ethics'' in 1369, and completed it in 1370; Aristotle’s ''Politics'' and ''Economics'' may have been completed between the years of 1372 and 1374; and the ''De caelo et mundo'' in 1377. Oresme received a pension from the royal treasury as early as 1371 as a reward for his labors. "[[Parisian Psychological School]]" ([[Jean Buridan]], [[Barthelemy de Bruges]], [[Jean de Jandun]], [[Henry of Hesse]] ([[Heinrich von Langenstein]]) etc.)
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Oresme’s work for Charles and the royal family earned him an appointment, on August 3, 1377, to the post of Bishop of Lisieux. It appears that Oresme did not take up residency at Lisieux until September of 1380, the year of Charles’ death.  Little is known of the final years of his life. Oresme died in Lisieux on July 11, 1382,  and was buried in the cathedral church.
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A crater on the moon is named for Oresme.
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== Thought and Works ==
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Nicole Oresme made significant contributions to late medieval natural philosophy.    He studied and wrote about philosophy, mathematics, economics, physics, musicology, and psychology, and anticipated the ideas of early modern scientists such as Copernicus, Galileo and Descartes.  He developed a geometric model to quantify and compare the intensities of qualities and of speeds.  Oresme also developed the language of ratios, introduced by Thomas Bradwardine to relate speed to force and resistance, and applied it to physical and cosmological questions.  He made a careful study of musicology and used his findings to develop the use of irrational exponents and the first theory that sound and light are a transfer of energy that does not displace matter.  More than thirty-four books and treatises by Nicole Oresme are extant. (For a complete list, visit http://www.nicole-oresme.com/seiten/oresme-bibliography.html)
  
Many of his most thoughtful Latin treatises antedate 1360 and show that Oresme was already an established schoolman of the highest reputation, which attracted the attention of the royal family, and brought him into intimate contact with the future [[Charles V of France|Charles V]] in 1356.
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His translations of Aristotle’s works introduced a number of technical terms into the French language.  He did not agree with Aristotle that “qualities” existed objectively, and worked extensively to prove that they were subject to the perception of the human mind.  He studied the influence of the subconscious mind on perception, and also the physical phenomena, such as atmospheric distortion, which cause errors in perception.  He also developed the use of probability ratios to determine the extent to which accurate perception was possible.
  
Beginning in 1356, during the captivity of his father, [[John II of France|John II]], in England, Charles acted as regent and from 1364 until 1380, King of France. On November 2, 1359, Oresme became "secretaire du roi" and in the period following, it appears that he became chaplain and counsellor to the king.
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=== Economics ===
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Oresme's views on economics are contained in "Commentary on the ''Ethics'' of [[Aristotle]], of which the French version is dated 1370; "Commentary on the ''Politics'' and the ''Economics'' of Aristotle," French edition, 1371; and ''Treatise on Coins'' (''De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum''). These three works, written in both Latin and French, mark Oresme as a precursor of the science of political economy, and reveal his mastery of the French language. Oresme created a number of French scientific terms and anticipated the usage of Latin words in the scientific language of the eighteenth century.  
  
There is a long tradition that says that Nicole Oresme was also the tutor to the [[dauphin]] (who later became Charles V), but this is not quite certain. Charles appears to have had the highest esteem for Oresme’s character and talents, often followed his counsel, and made him write many works in French for the purpose of popularizing the sciences and of developing a taste for learning in the kingdom. At Charles’s insistence Oresme delivered a discourse before the papal court at Avignon, denouncing the ecclesiastical disorder of the time.
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The French "Commentary on the ''Ethics'' of Aristotle" was printed in Paris in 1488; that on the ''Politics'' and the ''Economics'', in 1489. The ''Treatise on coins'', ''De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum'' was printed in Paris early in the sixteenth century, also at Lyons in 1675, as an appendix to the ''De re monetaria'' of Marquardus Freherus, is included in the ''Sacra bibliotheca sanctorum Patrum'' of Margaronus de la Bigne IX, (Paris, 1859), p. 159, and in the ''Acta publica monetaria'' of [[David Thomas de Hagelstein]] (Augsburg, 1642). The ''Traictié de la première invention des monnoies'' in French was printed at Bruges in 1477. For the complete list of Oresme's works see the [http://www.nicole-oresme.com/seiten/oresme-bibliography.html Oresme-Bibliography].
  
Much can be said about the fact that Oresme was a lifelong intimate friend and consultant of King Charles, "Le Sage", until his death in 1380. His influence on Charles’ progressive political, economical, ethical and philosophical thinking was probably quite strong, but an extensive investigation of these facts has not been tackled yet. Oresme was the most important person of a choice circle of intellectuals like [[Raoul de Presle]], [[Philippe de Mézières]], etc. at Charles’ court.
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=== Mathematics===
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His most important contributions to mathematics are contained in ''Tractatus de configuratione qualitatum et motuum'', still in manuscript. An abridgment of this work printed as the ''Tractatus de latitudinibus formarum'' of [[Johannes de Sancto Martino]] (1482, 1486, 1505 and 1515), has for a long time has been the only source for the study of Oresme's mathematical ideas. In a quality, or accidental form, such as heat, the [[Scholastics]] distinguished the ''intensio'' (the degree of heat at each point) and the ''extensio'' (as the length of the heated rod). These two terms were often replaced by ''latitudo'' and ''longitudo'', and from the time of [[Thomas Aquinas]] until far into the fourteenth century, there was lively debate on the ''latitudo formae.'' For the sake of clarity, Oresme conceived the idea of employing what, in modern terminology, we call rectangular co-ordinates. A length proportionate to the ''longitudo,'' representing space and time, was used as a base line, and from that line perpendicular lines, the ''latitudo,'' were erected representing the intensity or position of the variable at the corresponding time or length on the base line.  The ends of these vertical lines were then connected by a curving line which illustrated the variations in intensity.  The “latitudo” might vary or remain constant; a constant or uniform intensity would be represented by a horizontal line parallel to the base line, which Oresme designated the “latitudo uniformis;” any variation was called “latitude difformis.
  
Royal reliance on Oresme’s capabilities is evidenced, when the grand master of Navarre was sent by the dauphin to seek a loan from the municipal authorities of [[Rouen]] in 1356 (see above) and then in 1360. In 1361, with the support of Charles, while still grand master of Navarre, Oresme was appointed archdeacon of [[Bayeux]]. It is known that the fervent schoolman Oresme unwillingly surrendered the interesting post of grand master.
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Though he did not use numerical equivalents for the points on his graph, Oresme’s concept was an important one in the later development of [[analytical geometry]].  
  
On November 23, 1362, the year he became master of theology, Oresme was appointed canon of the [[Rouen Cathedral|Cathedral of Rouen]]. At the time of this appointment, he was still teaching regularly at the University of Paris.
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[[Image:Galileo-1638-173.jpg|thumb|right|[[Galileo]]'s demonstration of the law of the space traversed in case of uniformly varied motion. It resembles the demonstration that '''Oresme''' had made centuries earlier.]]
  
On February 10, 1363, he was made a canon at La Saint Chapelle, given a semiprebend and on March 18, 1364, and was elevated to the post of dean of the Cathedral of [[Rouen]].
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Oresme designated the area of the resulting geometrical figure the “mensura” or “quantitas,” and demonstrated that if the speed of an accelerating body (“uniformiter difformis”) were plotted over a certain period of time, the area (“quantitas”) of the resulting geometric figure was equal to the “quantitas” of a second geometric figure formed by plotting a constant speed (“latitudo uniformis”) equal to the mean between the lowest and highest speeds of the first figure over the same period of time.  This was the first proof of Merton's theorem, that the distance traveled in a fixed time by a body moving under uniform acceleration is the same as if the body moved at a uniform speed equal to its speed at the midpoint of the time period.  It was taught at Oxford by [[William Heytesbury]] and his followers, then at Paris and in Italy by subsequent followers of this school. In the middle of the sixteenth century, the Dominican [[Domingo de Soto]] applied the law to the uniformly accelerated falling of heavy bodies and to the uniformly decreasing ascension of projectiles.  Oresme's demonstration resembles the laws later developed by [[Galileo]], but there is no evidence that Galileo was directly influenced by Oresme’s work. 
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In ''Algorismus proportionum'' and ''De proportionibus proportionum'', Oresme developed the first use of powers with fractional exponents, calculation with [[irrational proportions]] (''proportio proportionum''). The basis of this method was Oresme’s equalization of continuous magnitudes and discrete numbers, an idea that Oresme took out of musical [[monochord]]-theory (''[[sectio canonis]]''). In this way, Oresme overcame the [[Pythagorean]] prohibition of regular division of Pythagorean intervals like 8/9, 1/2, 3/4, 2/3 and provided a tool to generate [[equal tempo]], anticipating [[Simon Stevin]]. Here an example for the equal division of an octave in 12 parts: <math>\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12}\cdot\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12}\cdots\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12} = \left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{12}{12}</math>
  
It is likely that the royal hand of John II, the father of Charles, was influenced by the suggestions of the dauphin, in Oresme’s frequent changes of positions.<ref>The peace treaty of Brétigny 1360 rescued John II from his custody in England. Because of the escape of his son, the [[duke of Anjou]], which leaved in England as hostage, John II came back to London in 1364. On April 8, 1364, he died there.</ref>
 
  
During his tenure in these successive posts at the Cathedral of Rouen (1364-1377), Oresme spent a lot of time in Paris, especially, in the context of attending to the affairs of the University. Even though many documents verify Oresme’s stays in Paris, nevertheless, we cannot infer that he was also teaching there at that time.
 
  
With the commencement of Oresme’s prolonged translating activities at the request of Charles V, he did reside continuously in Paris, as is shown to be true by letters dating from August 28 to November 11, 1372 sent by Charles to Rouen. Oresme’s residency in Paris appears to have been extended by Charles to 1380, when Oresme began working on his translation of [[Aristotle]]’s ''Ethics'' in 1369, which appears to be completed in 1370. Aristotle’s ''Politics'' and ''Economics'' may have been completed between the years of 1372 and 1374, and the ''De caelo et mundo'' in 1377. Oresme received a pension from the royal treasury as early as 1371 as a reward for his great labours.
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Oresme’s interest in limits, threshold values and [[infinite series]] by means of geometric additions (''Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''Questiones super geometriam Euclidis'') prepared the way for the infinitesimal calculus of Descartes and Galileo. He proved the divergence of the [[harmonic series (mathematics)|harmonic series]], using the standard method still taught in calculus classes today.
  
Because of Oresme’s untiring work for Charles and the royal family, with the king’s support, on August 3, 1377, Oresme attained the post of Bishop of [[Lisieux]]. It appears that Oresme didn’t take up residency at Lisieux until September of 1380, and little is known of the last five years of his life. Oresme died in Lisieux on July 11, 1382, two years after King Charles’ death, and was buried in the cathedral church.
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=== Musicology ===
  
== Oresme's scientific work ==
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Many of Oresme’s insights in mathematics, physics, philosophy, and psychology, which anticipate modern science, were closely bound up with musical models. The ''Musica'' functioned as a sort of "computer of the Middle Ages" and provided a means of testing theories in mathematics, physics, perception and psychology.
Oresme is best known as an economist, mathematician, and a physicist, according to Taschow's book (''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne'', 2003) also as a musicologist, psychologist and philosopher. Oresme's economic views are contained in "Commentary on the ''Ethics'' of [[Aristotle]], of which the French version is dated 1370; "Commentary on the ''Politics'' and the ''Economics'' of Aristotle", French edition, 1371; and ''Treatise on Coins'' (''De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum''). These three works were written in both Latin and French; and all of them, especially the last, stamp their author as the precursor of the science of political economy, and reveal his mastery of the French language. In this way, Oresme became a "sooner founder" of the French scientific language and terminology. He created a big number of French scientific terms and anticipated the usage of Latin words in the scientific language of the 18th century. The French "Commentary on the ''Ethics'' of Aristotle" was printed in Paris in 1488; that on the ''Politics'' and the ''Economics'', in 1489. The ''Treatise on coins'', ''De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum'' was printed in Paris early in the sixteenth century, also at Lyons in 1675, as an appendix to the ''De re monetaria'' of Marquardus Freherus, is included in the ''Sacra bibliotheca sanctorum Patrum'' of Margaronus de la Bigne IX, (Paris, 1859), p. 159, and in the ''Acta publica monetaria'' of [[David Thomas de Hagelstein]] (Augsburg, 1642). The ''Traictié de la première invention des monnoies'' in French was printed at Bruges in 1477. For the complete list of Oresme's works see the [http://www.nicole-oresme.com/seiten/oresme-bibliography.html Oresme-Bibliography].
 
  
If we are to make some of the following excursions into the fields of Oresme’s universal work such as in mathematics, musicology, psychology, natural philosophy, and physics, we need only illuminate a small part of each of them:
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Oresme's overarching aesthetic approach to natural phenomena was based on the conviction that the aesthetic evaluation of (graphically representable) sense experience provided an adequate principle of analysis. Music played an important role as the model for the "aesthetics of complexity and of the infinite" favored by the intellectual thought of the fourteenth century.  Oresme experimented with the parameters of sound (the ''sonus'') both on the microstructural, acoustical level of the single tone and on the macrostructural level of unison or polyphonic music. In attempting to capture analytically the various physical, psychological and aesthetic parameters of sound according to ''extensio'' (time intervals) and ''intensio'' (pitch), Oresme wished to establish criteria for infinitely variable grades of ''pulchritudo'' (beauty, harmony) and ''turpitudo'' (ugliness, dissonance). He developed the most complete mathematical description of musical phenomena before [[Galileo]]'s Discorsi.
  
===Mathematics===
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Oresme's "''configuratio qualitatum,'' and the functional pluridimensionality associated with it, are closely related to contemporary musicological diagrams, and to musical notation, which both quantifies and visually represents the variations of sound.
His most important contributions to mathematics are contained in ''Tractatus de configuratione qualitatum et motuum'', still in manuscript. An abridgment of this work printed as ''Tractatus de latitudinibus formarum'' of [[Johannes de Sancto Martino]] (1482, 1486, 1505 and 1515), for a long time has been the only source for the study of Oresme's mathematical ideas. In a quality, or accidental form, such as heat, the [[Scholastics]] distinguished the ''[[intensio]]'' (the degree of heat at each point) and the ''[[extensio]]'' (as the length of the heated rod). These two terms were often replaced by ''[[latitudo]]'' and ''[[longitudo]]'', and from the time of [[Thomas Aquinas]] until far into the fourteenth century, there was lively debate on the ''[[latitudo formae]]''. For the sake of clarity, Oresme conceived the idea of employing what we should now call rectangular co-ordinates, in modern terminology, a length proportionate to the ''longitudo'' was the abscissa at a given point, and a perpendicular at that point, proportional to the ''latitudo'', was the ordinate. Oresme shows that a geometrical property of such a figure could be regarded as corresponding to a property of the form itself. The parameters ''longitudo'' and ''latitudo'' can vary or remain constant. Oresme defines ''latitudo uniformis'' as that which is represented by a line parallel to the longitude, and any other ''latitudo'' is ''difformis''; the ''latitudo'' ''uniformiter'' ''difformis'' is represented by a right line inclined to the axis of the longitude. Oresme proved that this definition is equivalent to an algebraic relation in which the longitudes and latitudes of any three points would figure: i.e., he gives the equation of the right line, and thus long precedes [[Descartes]] in the invention of [[analytical geometry]]. In this doctrine, Oresme extends to figures of three dimensions.
 
  
[[Image:Galileo-1638-173.jpg|thumb|right|[[Galileo]]'s demonstration of the law of the space traversed in case of uniformly varied motion. It's the same demonstration that '''Oresme''' had made centuries earlier.]]
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Music helped to provide examples of the various types of uniform and difform configurations Oresme had developed, and to support the idea that certain configurations endowed qualities with specific effects, aesthetic or otherwise, which could be analytically captured by their geometric representation.  
Besides the longitude and latitude of a form, he considered the ''mensura'', or ''quantitas'', of the form, proportional to the area of the figure representing it. He proved this theorem: A form ''uniformiter difformis'' has the same quantity as a ''form uniformis'' of the same longitude and having as latitude the mean between the two extreme limits of the first. He then showed that his method of figuring the latitude of forms is applicable to the movement of a point, on condition that the time is taken as longitude and the speed as latitude; quantity is, then, the space covered in a given time. In virtue of this transposition, the theorem of the latitude ''uniformiter difformis'' became the law of the space traversed in case of uniformly varied motion. Oresme's demonstration is exactly the same as that which made [[Galileo]] a celebrated person in the seventeenth century. Moreover, this law was never forgotten during the interval between Oresme and Galileo because it was taught at Oxford by [[William Heytesbury]] and his followers, then at Paris and in Italy, by all the subsequent followers of this school. In the middle of the sixteenth century, long before Galileo, the Dominican [[Domingo de Soto]] applied the law to the uniformly accelerated falling of heavy bodies and to the uniformly decreasing ascension of projectiles.
 
  
In ''Algorismus proportionum'' and ''De proportionibus proportionum'', Oresme developed the first calculation-method of powers with fractional irrational exponents, i.e. the calculation with [[irrational proportions]] (''proportio proportionum''). The basis of this method was Oresme’s equalization of continuous magnitudes and discrete numbers, an idea that Oresme took out of the musical [[monochord]]-theory (''[[sectio canonis]]''). In this way, Oresme overcame the [[Pythagorean]] prohibition of regular division of Pythagorean intervals like 8/9, 1/2, 3/4, 2/3 and provided the tool to generate the [[equal temperament]] 250 years before [[Simon Stevin]]. Here an example for the equal division of octave in 12 parts: <math>\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12}\cdot\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12}\cdots\left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{1}{12} = \left(\frac{2}{1}\right)^\frac{12}{12}</math>
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Oresme used irrational exponents to discover “[[partial tones]]”or [[overtones]] three centuries before [[Marin Mersenne]]. He also recognized the relation between overtones and tone color, which he explained in a detailed and complex mathematical theory.
  
For instance, Oresme used this method in his musical section of the ''Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'' in context of his “[[overtone]] or partial tone theory” (see below) to produce irrational proportions of sound (ugly timbre or tone colour) in the direction of a “[[partial tone continuum]]” ([[white noise]]).<ref>Ulrich Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne'', Halle 2003, book 1, pages 142-163.</ref>
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Oresme’s Tractatus de configuratione et qualitatum motuum presented a mechanistic understanding of sound ''sonus'' as a specific discontinuous type of movement (vibration), of resonance as an overtone phenomenon, and of the relation between[[Consonance and dissonance|consonance]] and [[Consonance and dissonance|dissonance]], which went beyond the successful but incorrect [[coincidence theory]] of consonance later formulated in the seventeenth century. A demonstration such as Oresme's, of a correspondence between a mathematical method (''configuratio qualitatum et motuum'') and a physical phenomenon (sound), was rare in the fourteenth century, and the sections of the Tractatus de configurationibus dealing with music are milestones in the development of the methods of quantifying that characterizes modern science.
  
Finally Oresme was very interested in limits, threshold values and [[infinite series]] by means of geometric additions (''Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''Questiones super geometriam Euclidis'') that prepared the way for the infinitesimal calculus of Descartes and Galileo. He proved the divergence of the [[harmonic series (mathematics)|harmonic series]], using the standard method still taught in calculus classes today.
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Oresme, whose friend [[Philippe de Vitry]] was a famous music-theorist, composer and Bishop of Meaux, dealt nearly with every area of modern musicology:  
 
 
For Oresme’s anticipation of modern [[stochastic]], see below under the heading of "Natural Philosophy".
 
 
 
As Taschow undoubtedly has shown, Oresme transformed the above-discussed graphic method of his'' Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'' from the music-theory of his time. Hence, we come to Oresme’s very important contributions in the field of musicology:<ref>Ulrich Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne'', Halle 2003, book 1, pages 59-204. For Oresme's complex musicological writing see also book 3 and 4.</ref>
 
 
 
===Musicology===
 
 
 
In Oresme's "''configuratio qualitatum'' and the functional pluridimensionality" associated with it , one can see that they are closely related to contemporary musicological diagrams, and most importantly, to musical notation, which equally quantifies and visually represents the variations of a sonus according to given measures of extensio (time intervals) and intensio (pitch). The complex notational representations of music became, in Oresme's work, ''configurationes qualitatum'' or ''difformitates compositae'', music functioning once more as the legitimating paradigm.
 
But the sphere of music did not only provide Oresme's theory with an empirical legitimating, it also helped to exemplify the various types of uniform and difform configurations Oresme had developed, notably the idea that the configurationes endowed qualities with specific effects, aesthetical or otherwise, which could be analytically captured by their geometric representation.
 
This last point helps explain Oresme's overarching aesthetical approach to natural phenomena, which was based on the conviction that the aesthetic evaluation of (graphically representable) sense experience provided an adequate principle of analysis. In this context, music played once more an important role as the model for the "aesthetics of complexity and of the infinite" favored by the mentalité of the fourteenth century.
 
Oresme sought the parameters of the ''sonus'' experimentally both on the microstructural, acoustical level of the single tone and on the macrostructural level of unison or polyphonic music. In attempting to capture analytically the various physical, psychological and aesthetic parameters of the ''sonus'' according to ''extensio'' and ''intensio'', Oresme wished to represent them as the conditions for the infinitely variable grades of ''pulchritudo'' and ''turpitudo''. The degree to which he developed this method is unique for the Middle Ages, representing the most complete mathematical description of musical phenomena before [[Galileo]]'s Discorsi.
 
Noteworthy in this enterprise is not only the discovery of “[[partial tones]]”or [[overtones]] three centuries before [[Marin Mersenne]], but also the recognition of the relation between overtones and tone colour, which Oresme explained in a detailed physico-mathematical theory, whose level of complexity was only to be reached again in the nineteenth century by [[Hermann von Helmholtz]].
 
Finally, we must also mention Oresme’s mechanistic understanding of the ''sonus'' in his Tractatus de configuratione et qualitatum motuum as a specific discontinuous type of movement (vibration), of resonance as an overtone phenomenon, and of the relation of [[Consonance and dissonance|consonance]] and [[Consonance and dissonance|dissonance]], which went even beyond the successful but wrong [[coincidence theory]] of consonance formulated in the seventeenth century.
 
Oresme's demonstration of a correspondence between a mathematical method (''configuratio qualitatum et motuum'') and a physical phenomenon (sound) represents an exceptionally rare case, both for the fourteenth century, at large, and for Oresme’s work in particular. The sections of the Tractatus de configurationibus dealing with music are milestones in the development of the quantifying spirit that characterizes the modern epoch.
 
 
 
Oresme, the younger friend of [[Philippe de Vitry]], the famous music-theorist, composer and Bishop of Meaux, is the founder of modern musicology. Oresme dealt nearly with every musicological area in the modern sense<ref>U. Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne''.</ref> such as :
 
 
* acoustics (in ''Expositio super de anima'', ''Quaestiones de anima'', ''De causis mirabilium'', ''De configurationibus'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate''),
 
* acoustics (in ''Expositio super de anima'', ''Quaestiones de anima'', ''De causis mirabilium'', ''De configurationibus'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate''),
 
* musical aesthetics (in ''De configurationibus'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate''),
 
* musical aesthetics (in ''De configurationibus'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate''),
Line 76: Line 64:
 
* music philosophy (in ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'').
 
* music philosophy (in ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'').
  
With his very special „theory of species“(''[[multiplicatio specierum]]'') Oresme formulated the first and correct theory of [[wave-mechanics]] of sound and light, 300 years before [[Christian Huygens]] where Oresme describes a pure energy-transport without material spreading. The terminus „''[[species]]''in Oresme’s sense means the same as our modern term [[wave form]].
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Oresme formulated the first correct theory of [[wave-mechanics]], “theory of species“ (''multiplicatio specierum''), positing that sound and light involve the transport of pure energy without the deformation of any matter. (Oresme uses the term ''[[species]]'' in the same sense as the modern term [[wave form]].
  
Oresme discovered also the phenomenon of [[partial tones]] or [[overtones]], 300 years before [[Mersenne]] (see above) and the relation between overtones and [[tone colour]], 450 years before [[Joseph Sauveur]]. In his very detailed "physico-mathematical theory of partial tones and tone colour", Oresme anticipated the nineteenth century theory of [[Hermann von Helmholtz]].
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=== Psychology ===
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Oresme used empirical methods to investigate the phenomena of the human psyche.  Like others of the "[[Parisian Psychological School]]" ([[Jean Buridan]], [[Barthelemy de Bruges]], [[Jean de Jandun]], [[Henry of Hesse]] ([[Heinrich von Langenstein]])), Oresme accepted the activity of "inner senses" (sensus interior) and recognized the subjectivity, complexity and constructive tendencies of human perception of the world. Oresme’s thought on the subject was typical of fourteenth century scholarship, and his work was closely related to that of the scientists of optics ([[Alhazen]], [[Roger Bacon]], [[Witelo]], [[John Pecham]]). Oresme, however, proposed innovative ideas in the fields of [[cognitive psychology]], psychology of perception, psychology of consciousness and [[psycho-physics]].
  
In his musical aesthetics, Oresme formulated a modern subjective "theory of perception", which was not the perception of objective beauty of God’s creation, but the constructive process of perception, which causes the perception of beauty or ugliness in the senses. Therefore, one can see that every individual perceives another "world".
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Oresme examined the role of the psychological "[[unconscious]]" in perception and behavior. His "theory of unconscious conclusions of perception" and his “hypothesis of two attentions,” involving a conscious and an unconscious attention, anticipate the psychology of the twentieth century.  Oresme’s “theory of cognition” asserted that no thought-related concepts, such as categories, terms, qualities and quantities, exist outside of human consciousness.  He argued that  so-called "[[primary qualities]]" such as size, position, shape, motion, and rest were not 'objective' in outer nature, but should be seen as very complex cognitive constructions of the psyche under the individual conditions of the human body and soul.  Because reality is only in the instant ("expansionless moment,” “instantia”), Oresme reasoned that no motion could exist except in consciousness. This meant that motion was a result of human perception and memory, an active composition of "before" and "later." In the case of sound, Oresme wrote: "If a creature would exist without memory, it never could hear a sound…"
  
Many of Oresme’s insights in other disciplines like mathematics, physics, philosophy, psychology, which anticipate the self-image of modern times, are closely bound up with the "[[Model Music]]" (unusual for present-day thinking). The ''Musica'' functioned as a kind of "Computer of the Middle Ages" and in this sense it represented the all embracing hymn of new quantitative-analytic consciousness in 14th century.
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Oresme solved the "dualism" of the physical and the psychical world by using the three-part schema “''species'' - ''materia'' - ''qualitas sensibilis''” (“information” – “medium” – “meaning”) of his "species-theory."  The transportable ''species'' (information), like a [[waveform]] of sound, changes its medium (wood, air, water, nervous system, etc.) and the inner sense (''sensus interior'') constructs, by means of "unconscious conclusions," a subjective meaning from it.
  
===Psychology===
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In his studies of aesthetics in music, Oresme formulated a modern subjective "theory of perception", which explained that perception is not perception of objective beauty in God’s creation, but a constructive process of perception, which results in the perception of beauty or ugliness by the senses of the perceiver. Therefore, every individual perceives a different "world," based on a complex combination of conscious and unconscious circumstances.
Because of the work of Taschow it is also known that Oresme was an outstanding psychologist. By using a strong empirical method, he investigated the whole complex of phenomenons of the human psyche. Oresme was confident in the activity of "[[inner senses]]" ([[sensus interior]]) and in the constructiveness, complexity and subjectivity of the perception of world. By using this quite progressive features, Oresme was a typical exponent of the "[[Parisian Psychological School]]" ([[Jean Buridan]], [[Barthelemy de Bruges]], [[Jean de Jandun]], [[Henry of Hesse]] ([[Heinrich von Langenstein]]) etc.) and his work was closely related with the scientists of optics ([[Alhazen]], [[Roger Bacon]], [[Witelo]], [[John Pecham]] etc.). But in addition, the innovative and bold mind of Oresme anticipated very important facts of the psychology of the 19th and 20th century, especially, in the fields of [[cognitive psychology]], perception psychology, psychology of consciousness and [[psycho-physics]].
 
  
Oresme discovered the psychological "[[unconscious]]" and its great importance for perception and behaviour. On this basis, he formulated his inspired "[[theory of unconscious conclusions of perception]]" (500 years before [[Hermann von Helmholtz]]) and his “hypothesis of two attentions“, concerning the conscious and an unconscious attention as seen in 20th century knowledge.
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Oresme’s ideas of psyche were strongly mechanistic. Physical and psychical processes were equivalent in their structure and motion (''configuratio qualitatum et motuum''). Every structure had a qualitative (psychical) and a quantitative (physical) moment; therefore psychological processes (intensities) could be measured like physical ones. Thus, Oresme supplied the first scientific proposal for measurement of psyche and (against the views of [[Aristotle]] and the Scholastics) even of the [[immaterial soul]].
In his modern "theory of cognition", Oresme showed that no thought-content-like, categories, terms, qualities and quantities, out of human consciousness, exist. For instance, Oresme unmasked the so-called "[[primary qualities]]" such as size, position, shape, motion, rest etc. of the 17th century scientists ([[Galileo Galilei|Galilei]], [[John Locke]] etc.), .), and argued that they were not 'objective' in outer nature, but should be seen as very complex cognitive constructions of psyche under the individual conditions of the human body and soul.
 
Because reality is only at the "expansionless moment" (''instantia'') Oresme reasoned that, therefore, no motion could exist except in consciousness. It means that motion is a result of human perception and memory, in the sense, of the active composition of "before" and "later". This clever theory becomes plausible, for example, in the field of sound. Oresme wrote: "If a creature would exist without memory, it never could hear a sound…"<ref>Nicole Oresme, ''Quaestiones de anima: Si esset aliquod animal quod nullo haberet retentivam et non sentiret nisi in praesentia, tunc non proprie perciperet sonum. Patet statim propter hoc quod est res successiva sicut motus; ideo oportet aliqualiter recolere de praeterito.''</ref>  Sound is a human construction and nothing more.
 
  
In his modern "[[psycho-cybernetics]]" and "[[information theory]]" Oresme solved the "[[dualism-problem]]" of the physical and the psychical world by using the three-part schema “''species'' - ''materia'' - ''qualitas sensibilis''” of his brilliant "[[species-theory]]" (in modern terms: information - medium - meaning). The transportable ''[[species]]'' (information), like a [[waveform]] of sound, changes its medium (wood, air, water, nervous system etc.) and the inner sense (''[[sensus interior]]'') constructs by means of "[[unconscious conclusions]]" a subjective meaning from it.
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Oresme focused his attention most strongly on the psychology of perception. He composed a treatise, unique for the Middle Ages, on perception and its disorder and delusion (''De causis mirabilium''), examining each of the physical senses (sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste) and the cognitive functions. By analyzing delusions and disorders, Oresme recognized many essential laws of perception, such as the shape law ("Gestaltgesetze") and the limits of perception (maxima et minima).
  
Oresme had already developed a first "[[psycho-physics]]" that shows many similarities with the approach of [[Gustav Theodor Fechner]], the founder of modern psycho-physics. Oresme’s ideas of psyche are strongly mechanistic. Physical and psychical processes are equivalent in their structure of motion (''configuratio qualitatum et motuum''). Every structure has a qualitative (psychical) and a quantitative (physical) moment; and therefore psychological processes (intensities) can be measured like physical ones. In this way, Oresme supplied the first scientific legitimating of measurement of psyche and contra [[Aristotle]] and the Scholastics) even of the [[immaterial soul]].
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=== Natural Philosophy ===
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Oresme’s philosophical thinking reflects the complexity of his scientific and mathematical works.  He opposed the Aristotelian-scholastic dogma of the unchanging substantial species and endless repetitions; just as the model of the ''machina musica'' showed that in music, with a limited number of proportions and parameters, someone could produce very complex, infinitely varying and never-repeating structures (''De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'', ''Quaestio contra divinatores''), so the universe could form ever-changing structures from a set of parameters, principles and elements of matter. In Oresme’s linear-progressive world, at any given time everything was unique and new, and in the same way human knowledge of the universe was ever-changing.  Oresme created a dynamic structural model for the constitution of the substantial species and individuals found in nature, the so-called "theory of ''perfectio specierum''." (''De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''Quaestiones super de generatione et corruptione'', ''Tractatus de perfectionibus specierum'').  An Oresmian individual is a [[self-organizing system]] which arrives at its optimal state by defending itself from disturbing environmental influences.  
  
However, the strongest focus Oresme drew to the psychology of perception. Among a lot of parts in writings he composed, unique for the whole Middle Ages, a special treatise on perception and its disorder and delusion (''De causis mirabilium''), where he examined every sense (sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste) and cognitive functions. With the same method used by psychologists of the 20th century, namely by means of analysis of delusions and disorders, Oresme recognized already many essential laws of perception, for instance the "Gestaltgesetze" (shape-law) 500 years before Christian von Ehrenfels, limits of perception (maxima et minima), etc.<ref>U. Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne''.</ref>
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=== Theories of Probability ===
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Oresme made an extensive investigation of statistical approximate values and measurements and margins of error, and a "theory of probabilities" which he applied to psychology as well as to physics and mathematics.
  
===Natural philosophy===
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In ''De causis mirabilium,'' Oresme laid down two interdependent  psychological rules regarding the probability of errors in perception due to unconscious judgements, in order to illustrate that perception is never an objective “photography” but a complex psychological construction without absolute evidence. In mathematics, Oresme anticipated modern stochastic by developing a tool to judge the quantitative likelihood that a certain event would occur (''De proportionibus proportionum'').  Oresme used terms for his calculations of probability like ''verisimile'', ''probabile'' / ''probabilius'', ''improbabile'' / ''improbabilius'', ''verisimile'' / ''verisimilius'' / ''maxime verisimile'' and ''possibile equaliter,'' which had not been previously used in the context of probability, and were not used again until the seventeenth century. <ref>J. Franklin, ''The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal'', Baltimore 2001, ch. 6.</ref>
Taschow’s work (Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne) reveals also the very complex cosmos of Oresme’s philosophical thinking. Oresme anticipated many essential views of the self-image of modern times, such as, his insight into the [[commensurability (mathematics)|incommensurability]] of natural proportions, into the [[complexity]], the [[indetermination]] and the infinite changeability of the world etc. In Oresme’s linear-progressive world every time everything is unique new and by this way also the human knowledge.
 
  
The excellent model for this new infinite world of the 14th century (in contrast to the in endless repetitions captivated in ''[[musica mundana]]'' of antiquity) was the Oresmian ''machina musica''. For Oresme the music analogously showed that, with a limited number of proportions and parameters, someone could produce very complex, infinitely varying and never repeating structures (''De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'', ''Quaestio contra divinatores''). That is the same message as of the [[chaos theory]]of the 20th century where the iteration of the simplest formulas produce a highly complex world with no predictably of behaviour.
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===  Appearance of Ratios in Nature ===
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In his works ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'', ''De proportionibus proportionum'', ''Ad pauca respicientes,'' Oresme said, "If we take two unknown natural magnitudes like motion, time, distance, etc., then it is more probable (''verisimillius et probabilius'') that the ratio of these two is [[irrational]] rather than rational.”  According to Oresme this theorem applied generally to all of nature, the earthly and the celestial world. It had great effect on Oresme’s views of [[necessity]] and [[contingency]], and consequently on his view of the [[law of nature]] (''leges naturae'') and his criticism of astrology.  It is evident that the inspiration for this probability theory came from Oresme’s work in music.  The division of [[monochord]] (''sectio canonis'') clearly proved both to the sense of hearing and to mathematical reason that most of the divisions of chord produce irrational, dissonant intervals. 
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He examined the question as to whether the ratio of the periods of two heavenly bodies was a rational number asking:-
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... if anyone should make a mechanical clock, would he not make all the wheels move as harmoniously as possible?
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He then answered his own question, arguing that the irrationality of ratios will not rob the heavens of their beauty and will also not be inconsistent with regular movement. Oresme also worked on infinite series and argued for an infinite void beyond the Earth.
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=== Physics ===
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Oresme’s physical teachings are set forth in two French works, the ''Traité de la sphère'', twice printed in Paris (first edition without date; second, 1508), and the ''Traité du ciel et du monde'', written in 1377 at the request of King [[Charles V of France|Charles V]], but never printed. In most of the essential problems of statics and dynamics, Oresme follows the opinions advocated in Paris by his predecessor, [[Jean Buridan]] de Béthune, and his contemporary, [[Albert of Saxony (philosopher)|Albert of Saxony]]. In opposition to the Aristotelian theory of weight, which said that the natural location of heavy bodies is in the centre of the world, and that of light bodies in the concavity of the moon's orb, Oresme countered by proposing the following: "The elements tend to dispose themselves in such a manner that, from the centre to the periphery their specific weight diminishes by degrees." Oresme thought that a similar rule may exist in worlds other than ours.  
  
Based on the musico-mathematical principles of [[commensurability (mathematics)|incommensurability]], [[irrationality]] and [[complexity]], Oresme finally created a dynamic structure-model for the constitution of substantial species and individuals of nature, the so-called "theory of ''[[perfectio specierum]]''" (''De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum'', ''Quaestiones super de generatione et corruptione'', ''Tractatus de perfectionibus specierum'').
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In ''Traité du ciel et du monde'' Oresme gave several strong arguments for the daily rotation of the earth, and solved the objections based on the texts of Holy Scripture with an interpretation which is used by Catholic exegetics of the present day. He finally concluded, though, that the evidence for the rotation of the earth was not stronger than the evidence that the earth was static
By means of using an analogy of the musical qualities with the “first and second [[qualities]]” of [[Empedocles]], an Oresmian individual turns into a [[self-organizing system]] which takes the trouble to get to his optimal system state defending against disturbing environmental influences. This “automatic control loop” influences the substantial form (''forma substantialis''), already present in the modern sense, in the principles of biological [[evolution]], "[[adaption]]" and "[[mutation]]" of genetic material.
 
It is quite evident, that Oresme’s revolutionary theory overcame the Aristotelian-scholastic dogma of the unchanging substantial species and anticipated principles of the "[[system theory]]", [[self-organisation]] and [[biological evolution]] of [[Charles Darwin]].
 
  
A further very progressive approach was Oresme’s extensive investigation of statistical approximate values and measurements by means of margins of error. He formulated his "[[theory of probabilities]]", as well as, in the psychological, physical and mathematical fields:
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Oresme was one of the first to deduce that color and light are of the same nature, applying observations taken from his study of musical “overtones” and “tone colors” to the mixture of colors on a spinning top. In his treatise ''De visione stellarum'' Oresme questioned whether the stars are really where they seem to be, and applied principles of optics to describe the curvature of light through atmospheric refraction. 
  
For instance, Oresme laid down two psychological rules (''De causis mirabilium''). The first rule says: With an increase in the number of unconscious judgments of perception (depth of meaning) grows the probability of misjudgements and in this way, the probability of errors of perception. The second rule says: The more the number of [[unconscious judgments]] of perception exceed a diffuse limit,<ref>Ulrich Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne'', Halle 2003, book 4, pages 820-822.</ref> the more improbable is a fundamental error of perception because it never breaks down the vast majority of unconscious judgments. The knowledge-theoretical point of these depending on each other rules is that perception is nothing more than a probability value in the grey area of these two rules. Perception is never an objective “photography” but a complex construction without absolute evidence.
 
  
Now we provide an example for Oresme’s mathematical anticipation of elements of modern [[stochastic]] (''De proportionibus proportionum''). Oresme states: "If we take a finite multitude of positive integers, then it is the number of perfect integers or the number of cubes much lesser than other numbers." In addition, the more numbers we take, the larger is the relationship of the non-cubes to the cubes or of the imperfect integers to perfect integers. Therefore, if we do not know something about a number than it is probable (''verisimile'') that this number is not a cube. It is like in game (''sicut est in ludis''), where somebody asks whether a hidden number is a cube. One has more surety to answer with ‘No’ because this seems to be more probable (''probabilius et verisimilius'').
 
Oresme than looked at a multitude of 100 different mathematical objects that he had formed in a certain way, and he determined that from it (100 • 99) : 2 = 4950 combinations from each two elements can be formed. From those, 4925 show a certain interesting quality E, whereas the remaining do not have this quality E. Finally, Oresme calculated the quotient 4925 : 25 = 197 : 1 and concluded from it that it is probable (''verisimile'') that, if somebody is looking for such an unknown combination, this will show the quality E.
 
Thus Oresme calculated the number of the favourable and the number of the unfavourable cases and their quotients. But yet, he did not have the quotient from the number of the favourable and the entire number of the equally-possible cases. He did not quite have our modern "measure of probability". But Oresme still had developed a clever tool to judge the "easiness" of arrival of an event quantitatively. Oresme used terms for his calculations of probability like ''verisimile'', ''probabile'' / ''probabilius'', ''improbabile'' / ''improbabilius'', ''verisimile'' / ''verisimilius'' / ''maxime verisimile'' and ''possibile equaliter''. No one before Oresme, and even a long time after him, used these words in context of games and aleatory probabilities. We can find Oresme’s methods again later in [[Galileo Galilei|Galileo's]] and [[Blaise Pascal]]'s works in the 17th century.<ref>J. Franklin, ''The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal'', Baltimore 2001, ch. 6.</ref>
 
  
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== Original Works ==
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*Oresme, Nicole. An Abstract of Nicolas OreÌme's Treatise on the breadths of forms (The great books of St. John's) (The great books of St. John's).The St. John's bookstore, 1941.
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*Oresme, Nicole. De Proportionibus Proportionum and Ad Pauca Respicientes ,
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Wisconsin University Press, 1966
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*Oresme, Nicole. The De moneta of Nicholas Oresme, and English Mint documents;: Translated from the Latin with introd. and notes (Medieval texts). Nelson,1956.
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*Oresme, Nicole; Grant, Edward (Editor). Nicole Oresme and the Kinematics of Circular Motion (University of Wisconsin Publications in Medieval Science.) .University of Wisconsin Press, 1971. 
  
In conclusion we want to refer shortly to an example of Oresme’s probability theory in physics. In his works ''De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate'', ''De proportionibus proportionum'', ''Ad pauca respicientes'' etc. Oresme says: "If we take two unknown natural magnitudes like motion, time, distance, etc., then it is more probable (''verisimillius et probabilius'') that the ratio of these two are [[irrational]] rather than rational. According to Oresme this theorem applies generally to the whole nature, to the earthly and to the celestial world. It has great effect on Oresme’s views of [[necessity]] and [[contingency]], and in this way, of his view of the [[law of nature]] (''leges naturae'') and his criticism of astrology.
 
  
It is obvious that Oresme was inspired for his "probability theory in physics, mathematics and perception psychology" from his work in music: The division of [[monochord]] (''[[sectio canonis]]'') proved the sense of hearing and the mathematical reason clearly that most of the divisions of chord produce irrational, i.e. [[Consonance and dissonance|dissonant]] intervals.<ref>U. Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne''.</ref>
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==References==
  
===Physics===
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*Babbitt, Susan M. Oresme's Livre De Politiques and the France of Charles V (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society). American Philosophical Society, 1985.
Oresme’s physical teachings are set forth in two French works, the ''Traité de la sphère'', twice printed in Paris (first edition without date; second, 1508), and the ''Traité du ciel et du monde'', written in 1377 at the request of King [[Charles V of France|Charles V]], but never printed. In most of the essential problems of statics and dynamics, Oresme follows the opinions advocated in Paris by his predecessor, [[Jean Buridan]] de Béthune, and his contemporary, [[Albert of Saxony (philosopher)|Albert of Saxony]]. In opposition to the Aristotelian theory of weight, which said that the natural location of heavy bodies is in the centre of the world, and that of light bodies in the concavity of the moon's orb, Oresme countered by proposing the following: "The elements tend to dispose themselves in such a manner that, from the centre to the periphery their specific weight diminishes by degrees." Oresme thought that a similar rule may exist in worlds other than ours. This is the doctrine later substituted for the Aristotelian by [[Copernicus]] and his followers, such as [[Giordano Bruno]]. The latter argued in a manner so similar to Oresme's that it would seem he had read the ''Traité du ciel et du monde''. But Oresme had a much stronger claim to be regarded as the precursor of [[Copernicus]] when one considers what he says of the diurnal motion of the earth, to which he devoted the gloss following chapters xxiv and xxv of the ''Traité du ciel et du monde''. Oresme begins by establishing that no experiment can decide whether the heavens move form east to west or the earth from west to east; for sensible experience can never establish more than one relative motion. He then showed that the reasons proposed by the physics of [[Aristotle]] against the movement of the earth were not valid. Oresme than pointed out, in particular, the principle of the solution of the difficulty drawn from the movement of projectiles. Next he solved the objections based on the texts of Holy Scripture. In interpreting these passages he laid down rules universally followed by Catholic exegetics of the present day. Finally, he adduces the argument of simplicity for the theory that the earth moves, and not the heavens, and in the whole of his argument in favour of the earth's motion Oresme is both more explicit and much clearer than that given by [[Copernicus]].
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*Burton, Dan. Nicole Oresme's De Visione Stellarum (On Seeing the Stars): A Critical Edition of Oresme's Treatise on Optics And Atmospheric Refraction, With an Introduction, ... (Medieval and Early Modern Science). Scheduled for publication October, 2006.
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*Hansen, Bert. Nicole Oresme and the Marvels of Nature: A Study of His De Causis Mirabilium With Critical Edition, Translation, and Commentary (Studies and Texts (Pontifical Inst of Mediaeval Stds)) .Pontifical Institute of Medieval, 1985.
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*Menut, Albert D. Nicole Oresme: Highlights from His French Commentary on Aristotle's Politics . Coronado Press, 1979)
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*Taschow, Ulrich. ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne: Die Ursprünge unserer modernen quantitativ-metrischen Weltaneignungsstrategien und neuzeitlichen Bewusstseins- und Wissenschaftskultur''. Halle: Avox Medien-Verlag, 2003, 4 Books in 2 Volumes. ISBN 3-936979-00-6
  
Above, we were occupied with Oresme’s theory of [[wave-mechanics]] of sound and light. Therefore, it will not astonish us that Oresme for the first time assumed that colour and light are of the same nature. In Oresme’s absolute correct view colour is nothing more than broken and reflected [[white light]]: i.e. "the colours are parts of white light". Also this clever theory was inspired by Oresme’s musicological investigations: In his theory of ''[[overtones]]'' and tone colour Oresme analogized these musical facts with the phenomenon of mixture of colours on a rotating top.<ref>Ulrich Taschow, ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne'', Halle 2003, book 1, pages 150-153.</ref>
 
  
 
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== External links ==
We will close with Oresme’s genial discovery of the curvature of light through atmospheric [[refraction]]: In his treatise ''De visione stellarum'' Oresme asked if the stars are really where they seem to be. By using optics, Oresme answered that they are not. Two centuries before the Scientific Revolution, Oresme proposed the qualitatively correct solution to the problem of atmospheric refraction, that light travels along a curve through a medium of uniformly varying density, and he arrived at this solution using [[infinitesimals]]. Oresme concluded that nearly nothing in the heavens or on earth is seen where it truly is, calling all visual sense data into doubt. This solution had escaped both [[Ptolemy]] and [[Alhazen]]. It had even escaped [[Johannes Kepler|Kepler]] in the 17th century, and up to now, the credit for its first discovery has been given to [[Robert Hooke]] and its mathematical resolution to [[Isaac Newton]].
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* http://www.nicole-oresme.com Oresme Biography from which the above article was taken, with friendly authorization of its author Ulrich Taschow. There you can also find the complete bibliography of Oresme's work and many other materials on Nicole Oresme.  
 
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* {{MacTutor Biography|id=Oresme}}
These short excerpts of Oresme's enormous work show that he was one of the most innovative scientists in the "Spring of Modern Age" and a pioneer in the modern world.
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*http://www.gap-system.org/~history/Biographies/Oresme.html  School of Mathematics and Statistics
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University of St Andrews, Scotland
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*http://www.nicole-oresme.com/seiten/oresme-bibliography.html
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
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*[[Oresme (crater)]]
 
*[[Oresme (crater)]]
  
==Footnotes==
 
<references/>
 
 
==References==
 
 
* Taschow, Ulrich.  ''Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne: Die Ursprünge unserer modernen quantitativ-metrischen Weltaneignungsstrategien und neuzeitlichen Bewusstseins- und Wissenschaftskultur''.  Halle: Avox Medien-Verlag, 2003, 4 Books in 2 Volumes.  ISBN 3-936979-00-6
 
 
== External links ==
 
* http://www.nicole-oresme.com Oresme Biography from which the above article was taken, with friendly authorization of its author Ulrich Taschow. There you can also find the complete bibliography of Oresme's work and many other materials on Nicole Oresme.
 
* {{MacTutor Biography|id=Oresme}}
 
  
 
[[Category:1323 births]]
 
[[Category:1323 births]]

Revision as of 20:16, 19 September 2006

Portrait of Nicole Oresme: Miniature of Nicole Oresme's Traité de l’espere, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, France, fonds français 565, fol. 1r.

Nicole Oresme or Nicolas d'Oresme (c.1323 - July 11, 1382) was probably one of the most original thinkers of the 14th century, generating concepts and ideas which anticipated the scientific breakthroughs of scientists centuries later. An economist, mathematician, physicist, astronomer, philosopher, psychologist, and musicologist, he was also a passionate theologian and Bishop of Lisieux. He served as counselor of King Charles V of France, and at his behest translated several works of Aristotle into French and wrote numerous works in French popularizing science and learning.

Oresme's life

Therefore, I indeed know nothing except that I know that I know nothing. Quodlibeta, MS Paris, BN lat. 15126, 98v

NicoleOresme was born c.1320-1325 in the village of Allemagne ([1] today's Fleury-sur-Orne) in the vicinity of Caen, Normandy, in the Diocese of Bayeux. Nothing is known about his family except that he was of Norman descent. Oresme attended the royally sponsored and subsidized College of Navarre, an institution for students too poor to pay their expenses while studying at the University of Paris, indicates that he probably came from a peasant family.

Oresme studied the “artes” in Paris before 1342, together with Jean Buridan (often called founder of the French school of natural philosophy), Albert of Saxony and perhaps Marsilius of Inghen, and there received the Magister Artium. A recently discovered papal letter of provision granting Oresme an expectation of a benefice establishes that he was already a regent master in arts by 1342. This early dating of Oresme's arts degree places him at Paris during the crisis over William of Ockham's natural philosophy.

In 1348, he was a student of theology in Paris; in 1356, he received his doctorate and in the same year he became grand master (grand-maître) of the College of Navarre. Many of his most thoughtful Latin treatises antedate 1360, and show that Oresme was already an established schoolman of the highest reputation. He attracted the attention of the royal family, and was brought into intimate contact with the future Charles V in 1356. Charles began to act as regent in 1356, while his father John II was in captivity in England, and from 1364 until 1380, was King of France. On November 2, 1359, Oresme became "secretaire du roi" and upon Charles’ coronation on April 8, 1364, he became chaplain and counselor to the king. Charles appears to have had the highest esteem for Oresme’s character and talents, often followed his counsel, and made him write many works in French for the purpose of popularizing the sciences and of developing a taste for learning in the kingdom. At Charles’s insistence Oresme delivered a discourse before the papal court at Avignon, denouncing the ecclesiastical disorder of the time. As an intimate friend and advisor to King Charles, "Le Sage", until his death in 1380, Oresme was in a position to influence Charles’ progressive political, economical, ethical and philosophical thinking. Oresme was the most important of a circle of intellectuals, including Raoul de Presle and Philippe de Mézières, at Charles’ court.

Oresme, as the grand master of Navarre, was sent by the dauphin to seek a loan from the municipal authorities of Rouen in 1356 and then in 1360. Oresme, while still grand master of Navarre, was appointed archdeacon of Bayeux with the support of Charles in 1361. It is known that Oresme unwillingly surrendered the interesting post of grand master. Charles may have influenced his father, King John II, to grant Oresme a series of increasingly important appointments. On November 23, 1362, the year he became master of theology, Oresme was appointed canon of the Cathedral of Rouen. At the time of this appointment, he was still teaching regularly at the University of Paris. On February 10, 1363, he was made a canon at La Saint Chapelle, given a semiprebend and on March 18, 1364, and was elevated to the post of dean of the Cathedral of Rouen. During his tenure in these successive posts at the Cathedral of Rouen (1364-1377), documents related to affairs of the University show that Oresme spent considerable time in Paris, but it not known if he also continued to teach there. Letters sent by Charles to Rouen from August 28 to November 11, 1372, indicate that Oresme began working on translations at the request of the king, and took up residence in Paris. Oresme began his translation of Aristotle’s Ethics in 1369, and completed it in 1370; Aristotle’s Politics and Economics may have been completed between the years of 1372 and 1374; and the De caelo et mundo in 1377. Oresme received a pension from the royal treasury as early as 1371 as a reward for his labors. "Parisian Psychological School" (Jean Buridan, Barthelemy de Bruges, Jean de Jandun, Henry of Hesse (Heinrich von Langenstein) etc.) Oresme’s work for Charles and the royal family earned him an appointment, on August 3, 1377, to the post of Bishop of Lisieux. It appears that Oresme did not take up residency at Lisieux until September of 1380, the year of Charles’ death. Little is known of the final years of his life. Oresme died in Lisieux on July 11, 1382, and was buried in the cathedral church. A crater on the moon is named for Oresme.

Thought and Works

Nicole Oresme made significant contributions to late medieval natural philosophy. He studied and wrote about philosophy, mathematics, economics, physics, musicology, and psychology, and anticipated the ideas of early modern scientists such as Copernicus, Galileo and Descartes. He developed a geometric model to quantify and compare the intensities of qualities and of speeds. Oresme also developed the language of ratios, introduced by Thomas Bradwardine to relate speed to force and resistance, and applied it to physical and cosmological questions. He made a careful study of musicology and used his findings to develop the use of irrational exponents and the first theory that sound and light are a transfer of energy that does not displace matter. More than thirty-four books and treatises by Nicole Oresme are extant. (For a complete list, visit http://www.nicole-oresme.com/seiten/oresme-bibliography.html)

His translations of Aristotle’s works introduced a number of technical terms into the French language. He did not agree with Aristotle that “qualities” existed objectively, and worked extensively to prove that they were subject to the perception of the human mind. He studied the influence of the subconscious mind on perception, and also the physical phenomena, such as atmospheric distortion, which cause errors in perception. He also developed the use of probability ratios to determine the extent to which accurate perception was possible.

Economics

Oresme's views on economics are contained in "Commentary on the Ethics of Aristotle, of which the French version is dated 1370; "Commentary on the Politics and the Economics of Aristotle," French edition, 1371; and Treatise on Coins (De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum). These three works, written in both Latin and French, mark Oresme as a precursor of the science of political economy, and reveal his mastery of the French language. Oresme created a number of French scientific terms and anticipated the usage of Latin words in the scientific language of the eighteenth century.

The French "Commentary on the Ethics of Aristotle" was printed in Paris in 1488; that on the Politics and the Economics, in 1489. The Treatise on coins, De origine, natura, jure et mutationibus monetarum was printed in Paris early in the sixteenth century, also at Lyons in 1675, as an appendix to the De re monetaria of Marquardus Freherus, is included in the Sacra bibliotheca sanctorum Patrum of Margaronus de la Bigne IX, (Paris, 1859), p. 159, and in the Acta publica monetaria of David Thomas de Hagelstein (Augsburg, 1642). The Traictié de la première invention des monnoies in French was printed at Bruges in 1477. For the complete list of Oresme's works see the Oresme-Bibliography.

Mathematics

His most important contributions to mathematics are contained in Tractatus de configuratione qualitatum et motuum, still in manuscript. An abridgment of this work printed as the Tractatus de latitudinibus formarum of Johannes de Sancto Martino (1482, 1486, 1505 and 1515), has for a long time has been the only source for the study of Oresme's mathematical ideas. In a quality, or accidental form, such as heat, the Scholastics distinguished the intensio (the degree of heat at each point) and the extensio (as the length of the heated rod). These two terms were often replaced by latitudo and longitudo, and from the time of Thomas Aquinas until far into the fourteenth century, there was lively debate on the latitudo formae. For the sake of clarity, Oresme conceived the idea of employing what, in modern terminology, we call rectangular co-ordinates. A length proportionate to the longitudo, representing space and time, was used as a base line, and from that line perpendicular lines, the latitudo, were erected representing the intensity or position of the variable at the corresponding time or length on the base line. The ends of these vertical lines were then connected by a curving line which illustrated the variations in intensity. The “latitudo” might vary or remain constant; a constant or uniform intensity would be represented by a horizontal line parallel to the base line, which Oresme designated the “latitudo uniformis;” any variation was called “latitude difformis.”

Though he did not use numerical equivalents for the points on his graph, Oresme’s concept was an important one in the later development of analytical geometry.

Galileo's demonstration of the law of the space traversed in case of uniformly varied motion. It resembles the demonstration that Oresme had made centuries earlier.

Oresme designated the area of the resulting geometrical figure the “mensura” or “quantitas,” and demonstrated that if the speed of an accelerating body (“uniformiter difformis”) were plotted over a certain period of time, the area (“quantitas”) of the resulting geometric figure was equal to the “quantitas” of a second geometric figure formed by plotting a constant speed (“latitudo uniformis”) equal to the mean between the lowest and highest speeds of the first figure over the same period of time. This was the first proof of Merton's theorem, that the distance traveled in a fixed time by a body moving under uniform acceleration is the same as if the body moved at a uniform speed equal to its speed at the midpoint of the time period. It was taught at Oxford by William Heytesbury and his followers, then at Paris and in Italy by subsequent followers of this school. In the middle of the sixteenth century, the Dominican Domingo de Soto applied the law to the uniformly accelerated falling of heavy bodies and to the uniformly decreasing ascension of projectiles. Oresme's demonstration resembles the laws later developed by Galileo, but there is no evidence that Galileo was directly influenced by Oresme’s work. In Algorismus proportionum and De proportionibus proportionum, Oresme developed the first use of powers with fractional exponents, calculation with irrational proportions (proportio proportionum). The basis of this method was Oresme’s equalization of continuous magnitudes and discrete numbers, an idea that Oresme took out of musical monochord-theory (sectio canonis). In this way, Oresme overcame the Pythagorean prohibition of regular division of Pythagorean intervals like 8/9, 1/2, 3/4, 2/3 and provided a tool to generate equal tempo, anticipating Simon Stevin. Here an example for the equal division of an octave in 12 parts:


Oresme’s interest in limits, threshold values and infinite series by means of geometric additions (Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum, Questiones super geometriam Euclidis) prepared the way for the infinitesimal calculus of Descartes and Galileo. He proved the divergence of the harmonic series, using the standard method still taught in calculus classes today.

Musicology

Many of Oresme’s insights in mathematics, physics, philosophy, and psychology, which anticipate modern science, were closely bound up with musical models. The Musica functioned as a sort of "computer of the Middle Ages" and provided a means of testing theories in mathematics, physics, perception and psychology.

Oresme's overarching aesthetic approach to natural phenomena was based on the conviction that the aesthetic evaluation of (graphically representable) sense experience provided an adequate principle of analysis. Music played an important role as the model for the "aesthetics of complexity and of the infinite" favored by the intellectual thought of the fourteenth century. Oresme experimented with the parameters of sound (the sonus) both on the microstructural, acoustical level of the single tone and on the macrostructural level of unison or polyphonic music. In attempting to capture analytically the various physical, psychological and aesthetic parameters of sound according to extensio (time intervals) and intensio (pitch), Oresme wished to establish criteria for infinitely variable grades of pulchritudo (beauty, harmony) and turpitudo (ugliness, dissonance). He developed the most complete mathematical description of musical phenomena before Galileo's Discorsi.

Oresme's "configuratio qualitatum, and the functional pluridimensionality associated with it, are closely related to contemporary musicological diagrams, and to musical notation, which both quantifies and visually represents the variations of sound.

Music helped to provide examples of the various types of uniform and difform configurations Oresme had developed, and to support the idea that certain configurations endowed qualities with specific effects, aesthetic or otherwise, which could be analytically captured by their geometric representation.

Oresme used irrational exponents to discover “partial tones”or overtones three centuries before Marin Mersenne. He also recognized the relation between overtones and tone color, which he explained in a detailed and complex mathematical theory.

Oresme’s Tractatus de configuratione et qualitatum motuum presented a mechanistic understanding of sound sonus as a specific discontinuous type of movement (vibration), of resonance as an overtone phenomenon, and of the relation betweenconsonance and dissonance, which went beyond the successful but incorrect coincidence theory of consonance later formulated in the seventeenth century. A demonstration such as Oresme's, of a correspondence between a mathematical method (configuratio qualitatum et motuum) and a physical phenomenon (sound), was rare in the fourteenth century, and the sections of the Tractatus de configurationibus dealing with music are milestones in the development of the methods of quantifying that characterizes modern science.

Oresme, whose friend Philippe de Vitry was a famous music-theorist, composer and Bishop of Meaux, dealt nearly with every area of modern musicology:

  • acoustics (in Expositio super de anima, Quaestiones de anima, De causis mirabilium, De configurationibus, De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate),
  • musical aesthetics (in De configurationibus, De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate),
  • physiology of voice and hearing (in Quaestiones de sensu, Expositio super de anima),
  • psychology of hearing (in Quaestiones de anima, De causis mirabilium, Quaestiones de sensu),
  • musical theory of measurement (in Tractatus specialis de monocordi,[1] De configurationibus, Algorismus proportionum),
  • music theory (in De configurationibus),
  • musical performing (in De configurationibus),
  • music philosophy (in De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate).

Oresme formulated the first correct theory of wave-mechanics, “theory of species“ (multiplicatio specierum), positing that sound and light involve the transport of pure energy without the deformation of any matter. (Oresme uses the term species in the same sense as the modern term “wave form.”

Psychology

Oresme used empirical methods to investigate the phenomena of the human psyche. Like others of the "Parisian Psychological School" (Jean Buridan, Barthelemy de Bruges, Jean de Jandun, Henry of Hesse (Heinrich von Langenstein)), Oresme accepted the activity of "inner senses" (sensus interior) and recognized the subjectivity, complexity and constructive tendencies of human perception of the world. Oresme’s thought on the subject was typical of fourteenth century scholarship, and his work was closely related to that of the scientists of optics (Alhazen, Roger Bacon, Witelo, John Pecham). Oresme, however, proposed innovative ideas in the fields of cognitive psychology, psychology of perception, psychology of consciousness and psycho-physics.

Oresme examined the role of the psychological "unconscious" in perception and behavior. His "theory of unconscious conclusions of perception" and his “hypothesis of two attentions,” involving a conscious and an unconscious attention, anticipate the psychology of the twentieth century. Oresme’s “theory of cognition” asserted that no thought-related concepts, such as categories, terms, qualities and quantities, exist outside of human consciousness. He argued that so-called "primary qualities" such as size, position, shape, motion, and rest were not 'objective' in outer nature, but should be seen as very complex cognitive constructions of the psyche under the individual conditions of the human body and soul. Because reality is only in the instant ("expansionless moment,” “instantia”), Oresme reasoned that no motion could exist except in consciousness. This meant that motion was a result of human perception and memory, an active composition of "before" and "later." In the case of sound, Oresme wrote: "If a creature would exist without memory, it never could hear a sound…"

Oresme solved the "dualism" of the physical and the psychical world by using the three-part schema “species - materia - qualitas sensibilis” (“information” – “medium” – “meaning”) of his "species-theory." The transportable species (information), like a waveform of sound, changes its medium (wood, air, water, nervous system, etc.) and the inner sense (sensus interior) constructs, by means of "unconscious conclusions," a subjective meaning from it.

In his studies of aesthetics in music, Oresme formulated a modern subjective "theory of perception", which explained that perception is not perception of objective beauty in God’s creation, but a constructive process of perception, which results in the perception of beauty or ugliness by the senses of the perceiver. Therefore, every individual perceives a different "world," based on a complex combination of conscious and unconscious circumstances.

Oresme’s ideas of psyche were strongly mechanistic. Physical and psychical processes were equivalent in their structure and motion (configuratio qualitatum et motuum). Every structure had a qualitative (psychical) and a quantitative (physical) moment; therefore psychological processes (intensities) could be measured like physical ones. Thus, Oresme supplied the first scientific proposal for measurement of psyche and (against the views of Aristotle and the Scholastics) even of the immaterial soul.

Oresme focused his attention most strongly on the psychology of perception. He composed a treatise, unique for the Middle Ages, on perception and its disorder and delusion (De causis mirabilium), examining each of the physical senses (sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste) and the cognitive functions. By analyzing delusions and disorders, Oresme recognized many essential laws of perception, such as the shape law ("Gestaltgesetze") and the limits of perception (maxima et minima).

Natural Philosophy

Oresme’s philosophical thinking reflects the complexity of his scientific and mathematical works. He opposed the Aristotelian-scholastic dogma of the unchanging substantial species and endless repetitions; just as the model of the machina musica showed that in music, with a limited number of proportions and parameters, someone could produce very complex, infinitely varying and never-repeating structures (De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum, De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate, Quaestio contra divinatores), so the universe could form ever-changing structures from a set of parameters, principles and elements of matter. In Oresme’s linear-progressive world, at any given time everything was unique and new, and in the same way human knowledge of the universe was ever-changing. Oresme created a dynamic structural model for the constitution of the substantial species and individuals found in nature, the so-called "theory of perfectio specierum." (De configurationibus qualitatum et motuum, Quaestiones super de generatione et corruptione, Tractatus de perfectionibus specierum). An Oresmian individual is a self-organizing system which arrives at its optimal state by defending itself from disturbing environmental influences.

Theories of Probability

Oresme made an extensive investigation of statistical approximate values and measurements and margins of error, and a "theory of probabilities" which he applied to psychology as well as to physics and mathematics.

In De causis mirabilium, Oresme laid down two interdependent psychological rules regarding the probability of errors in perception due to unconscious judgements, in order to illustrate that perception is never an objective “photography” but a complex psychological construction without absolute evidence. In mathematics, Oresme anticipated modern stochastic by developing a tool to judge the quantitative likelihood that a certain event would occur (De proportionibus proportionum). Oresme used terms for his calculations of probability like verisimile, probabile / probabilius, improbabile / improbabilius, verisimile / verisimilius / maxime verisimile and possibile equaliter, which had not been previously used in the context of probability, and were not used again until the seventeenth century. [2]

Appearance of Ratios in Nature

In his works De commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate, De proportionibus proportionum, Ad pauca respicientes, Oresme said, "If we take two unknown natural magnitudes like motion, time, distance, etc., then it is more probable (verisimillius et probabilius) that the ratio of these two is irrational rather than rational.” According to Oresme this theorem applied generally to all of nature, the earthly and the celestial world. It had great effect on Oresme’s views of necessity and contingency, and consequently on his view of the law of nature (leges naturae) and his criticism of astrology. It is evident that the inspiration for this probability theory came from Oresme’s work in music. The division of monochord (sectio canonis) clearly proved both to the sense of hearing and to mathematical reason that most of the divisions of chord produce irrational, dissonant intervals. He examined the question as to whether the ratio of the periods of two heavenly bodies was a rational number asking:- ... if anyone should make a mechanical clock, would he not make all the wheels move as harmoniously as possible? He then answered his own question, arguing that the irrationality of ratios will not rob the heavens of their beauty and will also not be inconsistent with regular movement. Oresme also worked on infinite series and argued for an infinite void beyond the Earth.

Physics

Oresme’s physical teachings are set forth in two French works, the Traité de la sphère, twice printed in Paris (first edition without date; second, 1508), and the Traité du ciel et du monde, written in 1377 at the request of King Charles V, but never printed. In most of the essential problems of statics and dynamics, Oresme follows the opinions advocated in Paris by his predecessor, Jean Buridan de Béthune, and his contemporary, Albert of Saxony. In opposition to the Aristotelian theory of weight, which said that the natural location of heavy bodies is in the centre of the world, and that of light bodies in the concavity of the moon's orb, Oresme countered by proposing the following: "The elements tend to dispose themselves in such a manner that, from the centre to the periphery their specific weight diminishes by degrees." Oresme thought that a similar rule may exist in worlds other than ours.

In Traité du ciel et du monde Oresme gave several strong arguments for the daily rotation of the earth, and solved the objections based on the texts of Holy Scripture with an interpretation which is used by Catholic exegetics of the present day. He finally concluded, though, that the evidence for the rotation of the earth was not stronger than the evidence that the earth was static

Oresme was one of the first to deduce that color and light are of the same nature, applying observations taken from his study of musical “overtones” and “tone colors” to the mixture of colors on a spinning top. In his treatise De visione stellarum Oresme questioned whether the stars are really where they seem to be, and applied principles of optics to describe the curvature of light through atmospheric refraction.


Original Works

  • Oresme, Nicole. An Abstract of Nicolas OreÌme's Treatise on the breadths of forms (The great books of St. John's) (The great books of St. John's).The St. John's bookstore, 1941.
  • Oresme, Nicole. De Proportionibus Proportionum and Ad Pauca Respicientes ,

Wisconsin University Press, 1966

  • Oresme, Nicole. The De moneta of Nicholas Oresme, and English Mint documents;: Translated from the Latin with introd. and notes (Medieval texts). Nelson,1956.
  • Oresme, Nicole; Grant, Edward (Editor). Nicole Oresme and the Kinematics of Circular Motion (University of Wisconsin Publications in Medieval Science.) .University of Wisconsin Press, 1971.


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Babbitt, Susan M. Oresme's Livre De Politiques and the France of Charles V (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society). American Philosophical Society, 1985.
  • Burton, Dan. Nicole Oresme's De Visione Stellarum (On Seeing the Stars): A Critical Edition of Oresme's Treatise on Optics And Atmospheric Refraction, With an Introduction, ... (Medieval and Early Modern Science). Scheduled for publication October, 2006.
  • Hansen, Bert. Nicole Oresme and the Marvels of Nature: A Study of His De Causis Mirabilium With Critical Edition, Translation, and Commentary (Studies and Texts (Pontifical Inst of Mediaeval Stds)) .Pontifical Institute of Medieval, 1985.
  • Menut, Albert D. Nicole Oresme: Highlights from His French Commentary on Aristotle's Politics . Coronado Press, 1979)
  • Taschow, Ulrich. Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne: Die Ursprünge unserer modernen quantitativ-metrischen Weltaneignungsstrategien und neuzeitlichen Bewusstseins- und Wissenschaftskultur. Halle: Avox Medien-Verlag, 2003, 4 Books in 2 Volumes. ISBN 3-936979-00-6


External links

University of St Andrews, Scotland

See also

  • History of science in the Middle Ages
  • List of polymaths
  • Oresme (crater)

de:Nikolaus von Oresme es:Nicolás Oresme fr:Nicole Oresme pt:Nicole d'Oresme sl:Nicole Oresme sv:Nicolas Oresme

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  1. This source is missing.
  2. J. Franklin, The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal, Baltimore 2001, ch. 6.