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AUTHORS:

Achillini, Alessandro

Agricola, Georgius

Alberti, Leone Battista

Archimedes

Aristotle

Babington, John

Baif, Lazare de

Baldi, Bernardino

Baliani, Giovanni Battista

Barocius, Franciscus

Benedetti, Giovanni Battista

Berga, Antonio

Biancani, Giuseppe

Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso

Borro, Girolamo

Boyle, Robert

Branca, Giovanni

Buonamici, Francesco

Buteo, Johannes

Cardano, Girolamo

Casati, Paolo

Castelli, Benedetto

Cataneo, Girolamo

Ceredi, Giuseppe

Ceva, Giovanni

Cicero, M. Tullius

Commandino, Federico

Delfino, Federico

Descartes, Rene

Epicurus

Euclid

Fabri, Honore

Foscarini, Paolo Antonio

Galilei, Galileo

Gassendi, Pierre

Ghetaldi, Marino

Giphanius, Hubert

Guevara, Giovanni di

Heron Alexandrinus

Heytesbury, William

Hutton, Charles

Jordanus de Nemore

Landi, Bassiano

Lorini, Buonaiuto

Lucretius

Manuzio, Paolo

Marci of Kronland, Johannes Marcus

Mellini, Domenico

Mersenne, Marin

Monantheuil, Henri de

Monte, Guidobaldo del

Morelli, Gregorio

Newton, Isaac

Pacioli, Luca

Pappus Alexandrinus

Salusbury, Thomas

Santbech, Daniel

Schott, Gaspar

Schreck, Johann Terrenz

Stelliola, Niccolò Antonio

Stevin, Simon

Tartaglia, Niccolò

Thomaz, Alvaro

Thucydides

Torricelli, Evangelista

Valerio, Luca

Varro, Michel

Vitruvius Pollio

Wolff, Christian von


























 
Buteo, Johannes (actually Borrel, Jean)
born around 1492, died between 1564 and 1572, French mathematician

His father François, a Seigneur d’Expenel, hailed from German nobility and supposedly fathered twenty children. Because Buteo did not want to be a burden to his parents, around the year 1508 he entered the Abbey of St. Antoine, where he studied primarily languages and mathematics, soon learning to read and understand the original Greek texts by Euclid. In 1522 he went to Paris, where he studied with Oronce Finé (1494 – 1555). In 1528 he returned to St. Antoine to resume his life as a monk. During this time he was also abbot of the monastery for two years. During the first religious war in 1562 he was forced to leave the monastery and flee to Romans-sur-Isère, where he is supposed to have died of sorrow and boredom shortly thereafter.
Buteo’s fame is based solely on his books, all of which he published after the age of sixty. His Opera geometrica appeared in Lyon in 1554 and contain fifteen articles on different mathematical subjects. The first nine articles deal with mechanical, arithmetical and geometrical problems; of these the article “Ad problema cubi duplicandi” is the most original. In this article Buteo shows that Michael Stifel (1494 - 1555) was incorrect in asserting that he had found an exact solution for the duplication of the cube, and presents his own approximate solution for this classical problem. In the final six articles he deals with the mathematical treatment of juridical problems, such as partitioning land and dividing up inheritances.
In his book De quadraturi circuli, published in Lyon in 1559, Buteo proves that the supposedly exact solutions for the squaring of the circle given by a variety of mathematicians, for instance, his teacher Oronce Finé, are incorrect, and explains the approximate solutions for squaring the circle given by Bryson of Heracleia, Archimedes and Ptolemy. The second part of this work concerns terminological issues and criticizes many of his contemporaries for their terminological errors. This second section is of particular interest for the history of mathematics for Buteo’s proof that the author of the proofs in Euclid’s Elements was not Theon of Alexandria (second half of the 4th century A.D.), as was generally presumed at that time, but rather Euclid himself. Here is where the famous dispute about the problem of the angle of tangency to a circle (Euclid Book III Prop. 16) began, in which many important mathematicians of the day participated, such as Clavius (1537 - 1612) and Peletier (1517 - 1582). In his Apologie, published in Lyon in 1562, Buteo elucidated his objections to Peletier in greater detail.
The most influential work Buteo published is his Logistica, sub-divided into five books (Lyon 1559). In the first two books Buteo deals with arithmetic, and in a third book with algebra. The fourth and fifth books concern many problems which can be solved primarily by combining arithmetic and algebra. For instance, Buteo deals quite successfully with the solution of systems of linear equations and also provides good approximate solutions for the calculation of square roots and cubic roots.
Buteo himself is a very isolated figure in the history of mathematics, as he published his books quite late in life and apparently cultivated little contact to other contemporary mathematicians, whom his sharp critique may well have antagonized.



Digital facsimiles (1 texts)

              Title

Edition

Opera Geometrica
1559