Tommaso Ceva

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Tommaso Ceva
Tommaso Ceva
BornDecember 20, 1648 (1648-12-20)
DiedFebruary 3, 1737 (1737-02-04) (aged 88)
Milan, Duchy of Milan
NationalityItalian
Alma materJesuit College of Brera, Milan
Occupations
  • Jesuit priest
  • Poet
  • Scientist
Known forCycloid of Ceva
Parent(s)Carlo Francesco Ceva and Paola Ceva (née de' Colombi)
Scientific career
Fieldsmathematics, geometry, physics
InstitutionsJesuit College of Brera, Milan
Notable students

Tommaso Ceva (December 20, 1648 – February 3, 1737) was an Italian Jesuit mathematician from Milan. He was the brother of Giovanni Ceva. His work aided in spreading a knowledge of Newton's discovery of the law of gravitation.

Biography[edit]

Tommaso Ceva was born into a wealthy Milanese family in 1648. After studying at the Collegio di Brera, a Jesuit college in Milan, on 24 March 1663 he entered the Society of Jesus. He taught mathematics and rhetoric at the Jesuit College of Brera in Milan for thirty-eight years.[1] His most famous student was Giovanni Girolamo Saccheri. Under the tutelage of Ceva, Saccheri wrote his first work, titled Quaesita geometrica (Geometric Investigations, 1693). Ceva was one the main representatives of Celia Grillo Borromeo's Academia Vigilantium.[2] Joseph I named him Caesarian Theologian early in the 18th century.[2]

His first scientific work, De natura gravium (The Nature of Gravity, 1699), dealt with physical subjects - such as gravity and free fall - in a philosophical way. His only mathematical work, published in 1699 was the Opuscula Mathematica (Mathematical Essays), which dealt with geometry, gravity and arithmetic. Ceva designed an instrument to divide a right angle into a specified number of equal parts.[3] His device, described in the Acta Eruditorum in 1695, won him the attention of Leibniz.[4] This same instrument was described in 1704 by the French mathematician Guillaume de l'Hôpital.[5]

In his Philosophia novo-antiqua (New-Ancient Philosophy, 1704) Ceva defended scholasticism against the systems Descartes and Gassendi and tried to reconcile the best of ancient and modern natural philosophy.[6] The work comprises six dissertations, dealing with topics ranging from mathematics to cosmology and mechanics, and engages with live issues for the science of the time (Copernican theory; Descartes's physics and denial of animal souls; Gassendi's atomism). Ceva accepted Galileo's theory of motion but not his cosmology. As far as Cartesian physics is concerned, he especially criticized the identification of the essence of matter with extension.[7] Ceva's Philosophia novo-antiqua was reissued in Wien in 1719, in Florence in 1723 and in Venice in 1732.

Ceva was also a noted poet and dedicated a significant amount of his time to this task. In the literary field Ceva shared the Arcadian reaction against marinism, and summed it up in his oft-quoted definition of poetry as ‘un sogno che si fa in presenza della ragione’ (“a dream made in the presence of reason”).[6] His Latin poem Jesus Puer, dedicated to the Holy Roman emperor Joseph I, was translated into many languages including German and Italian. Two other collections of Latin verses, Sylvae (1699; “Woods”) and Carmina (1704; “Poems”), range over philosophic, scientific, religious, and literary subjects. Ceva was made a fellow of the Arcadia in 1718 and was in correspondence with Vincenzo Viviani and Luigi Guido Grandi.[2] He was a close friend of the mathematician Pietro Paolo Caravaggio and his son Pietro Paolo Caravaggio junior.[8]

His Opuscula mathematica brought him international fame and his Carmina were favourably reviewed in Acta Eruditorum.[9] His work was highly praised by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart.[10]

In his latter years Ceva suffered from paralysis. He died in Milan on 3 February 1737.[2]

The Cycloid of Ceva[edit]

Cycloid of Ceva

Prompted by the familiar "insertion" method of Archimedes, Ceva devised in 1699 a curve for trisection which was called the "Cycloidum anomalarum".[11] The principle involved is that of doubling angles. The cycloid of Ceva has the polar equation

.

In Cartesian coordinates the equation of this curve is

.

To trisect the angle , construct a line parallel to the polar axis (the positive axis). Let be the point of intersection of the cycloid and the line. Then the angle is one-third of the angle .

Proof: let angle be and let the point on the axis be such that . Let be the orthogonal projection of on the line . The angle , so . Since , , . So angle equals , but .

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Grendler, Paul F. (2017). The Jesuits and Italian Universities, 1548-1773. CUA Press. p. 379. ISBN 9780813229362.
  2. ^ a b c d Gronda 1980.
  3. ^ Instrumentum pro sectione cujuscunque anguli rectilinei in partes quotcunque aequales (Milan, 1695; repr. In Acta eruditorum [1695], p. 290).
  4. ^ Heilbron, John L. (2009). The Sun in the Church. Cathedrals as Solar Observatories. Harvard University Press. p. 213. ISBN 9780674038486.
  5. ^ Oettel 1981, p. 183.
  6. ^ a b Lindon 2002.
  7. ^ Belgioioso, Giulia (2019). ""Italy Did Not Want to Be Cartesian" And For Good Reason". The Oxford Handbook of Descartes and Cartesianism. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 527. ISBN 978-0192517210.
  8. ^ Ulivi 1989, p. 93.
  9. ^ Actorum eruditorum quae Lipsiae publicantur. Supplementa 3 (1702): 423–5.
  10. ^ Oettel 1981, p. 184.
  11. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Cycloid of Ceva". MathWorld.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Lindon, J. (2002). "Ceva, Tommaso". The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  • Argelati, Filippo (1745). Bibliotheca scriptorum mediolanesium. Vol. 1. Milan: in Aedibus Palatinis. pp. 417–20.
  • Riccardi, Pietro (1870). Biblioteca matematica italiana. Vol. 1. Modena: tipografia dell'erede Soliani. pp. 343–4.
  • Gronda, Giovanna (1980). "CEVA, Tommaso". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 24: Cerreto–Chini (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  • Sommervogel, Carlos (1891). Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus. Vol. 2. Brusels: Oscar Schepens. pp. 1015–24.
  • Alberto Pascal, L'apparecchio polisettore di Tommaso Ceva e una lettera inedita di Guido Grandi, «Rendiconti dell'Istituto Lombardo di Scienze e Lettere», s. II, 48 (1915), pp. 173–181.
  • Ramat, Raffaello, "La critica del padre Ceva," Civiltà moderna, 10 (1938), 385-95, and 11 (1939), 139-66. (Reprinted in Sette contributi agli studi di storia della letteratura italiana, (Florence, 1947), pp. 5–44.
  • Luigi Tenca, La corrispondenza epistolare fra Tommaso Ceva e Guido Grandi, in Rendiconti dell'Istituto lombardo di scienze e lettere, classe di scienze matematiche e naturali, LXXXIV (1951), pp. 519–537.
  • Masiello, Vitilio (1959). "Critica e gusto di Tommaso Ceva". Convivium. XXVII (4): 288–313.
  • Masiello, Vitilio (1960). "Le idee estetiche di Tommaso Ceva". Convivium. XXVIII (3): 298–317.
  • Oettel, Herbert (1981). "Ceva, Tomasso". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. III. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 183–184. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  • Simonutti, Luisa (1989). "Guido Grandi, scienziato e polemista, e la sua controversia con Tommaso Ceva". Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa. Classe di Lettere e Filosofia. 19 (3): 1001–1026. JSTOR 24307638.
  • Ulivi, Elisabetta (1989). "Un tardo seguace di Viète, Pietro Paolo Caravaggio senior". Bollettino di Storia delle Scienze Matematiche. IX (1): 91–137. ISSN 0392-4432.
  • Canziani, Guido, "Descartes e Gassendi nella Philosophia Novo-antiqua di Tommaso Ceva," in Per una storia critica della scienza, ed. Marco Beretta, Felice Mondella, and Maria Teresa Monti (Bologna: Cisalpino, 1997), 139-64.
  • Haskell, Yasmin (2008). "Sleeping with the Enemy: Tommaso Ceva's Use and Abuse of Lucretius in the Philosophia novo-antiqua (Milan, 1704)". What Nature Does Not Teach: Didactic Literature in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods. Turnhout: Brepols: 497–520.

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