Pierre-Simon Laplace
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the great French mathematician who tackled questions on the stability of the Solar System and planet rotation and devised the basis for metrication
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Laplace (1749-1827) who was a giant in the world of mathematics both before and after the French Revolution. He addressed one of the great questions of his age, raised but side-stepped by Newton: was the Solar System stable, or would the planets crash into the Sun, as it appeared Jupiter might, or even spin away like Saturn threatened to do? He advanced ideas on probability, long the preserve of card players, and expanded them out across science; he hypothesised why the planets rotate in the same direction; and he asked if the Universe was deterministic, so that if you knew everything about all the particles then you could predict the future. He also devised the metric system and reputedly came up with the name 'metre'.
With
Marcus du Sautoy
Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford
Timothy Gowers
Professor of Mathematics at the College de France
And
Colva Roney-Dougal
Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of St Andrews
Producer: Simon Tillotson
Last on
LINKS AND FURTHER READING
READING LIST
David M. Burton, The History of Mathematics: An Introduction (McGraw-Hill Education, 2010)
Charles Coulston Gillispie, Pierre-Simon Laplace, 1749-1827: A Life in Exact Science (Princeton University Press, 2000)
Marcus du Sautoy, What We Cannot Know: From Consciousness to the Cosmos, the Cutting Edge of Science Explained (Fourth Estate, 2017)
Roger Hahn, Pierre Simon Laplace, 1749-1827: A Determined Scientist (Harvard University Press, 2005)
Stephen Hawking (ed.), God Created the Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs That Changed History (Penguin, 2006)
Victor J. Katz, A History of Mathematics: An Introduction (Pearson, 1998)
Pierre-Simon Laplace (trans. Frederick Wilson Truscott), A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2015)
Ivars Peterson, Newton's Clock: Chaos in the Solar System (W.H.Freeman & Co, 1995)
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- Thu 8 Apr 2021 09:00成人论坛 Radio 4
- Thu 8 Apr 2021 21:30成人论坛 Radio 4
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