Friday, June 19, 2015

France: Day 9 - Chatelet

Today is the birthday of Blaise Pascal born 1623 in Cleremont-Ferrand, France. At the age of 19, Pascal invented the first mechanical calculator that was sold commercially. In physics, he proved that air had weight and that vacuums are possible in nature. In mathematics, he developed an early form of integral calculus and cofounded with Fermat, probability theory. Eventually, Pascal lived as an informal hermit producing two works of religous philosophy: Provential Letters and Thoughts.

Today's quote is written by Voltaire in a correspondance to King Frederick II of Prussia. He wrote that Chatelet "was a great man whose only fault was being a woman."


Emilie du Chatele

Emilie du Chatele was born December 17, 1706 in Paris, France. Chatele was a noblewoman who made contributions in the areas of philosophy, natural science, and mathematics. 

In her writings, she challenged John Locke's philosophy. She was adamant that knowledge could only be verified through experience.

In natural science, she specifically focused on fire. She predicted that there was a special light that emanated heat on objects. This special light is now known as infrared radiation.

In the mathematics, she is most well known for translating Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica. This translation led French scientists to discard Cartesian physics and adopt Newtonian which was highly controversial at the time. She also corrected Newton. Newton had shown that energy of a moving object was proportional to the mass times the velocity of the object. Chatele demonstrated that energy was proportional to the mass times the square of the velocity of the object. Chatele's work on the relationship between energy and velocity inspired Albert Einstein to formulate the equation, E = mc^2.

Emilie Chatele was born during the Age of Enlightenment. Her father was a courtier for King Louis XIV and her parents used this advantage to educate her in languages, mathematics, and the sciences. Her mother strongly encouraged her to question any stated fact. This encouragement helped foster an independent thinking daughter. Her independence was present in her intellectual works as well as her personal life. She had an intellectual and intimate relationships with Voltaire and the philosophers, Maupertuis, and La Mettrie. She was independent and original woman. She was her own person.


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