talian
artists and merchants influenced the mathematics of the late Middle Ages and
the Renaissance in several ways. In the 15th century a group of Tuscan artists,
including Filippo Brunelleschi, León Battista Alberti, and Leónardo da Vinci,
incorporated linear
perspective into their practice and teaching, about a century before the
subject was formally treated by mathematicians. Italian maestri d'abbaco
tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to solve nontrivial cubic
equations. In fact, the first general solution was found by Scipione Del
Ferro at the beginning of the 16th century and rediscovered by Niccolò Tartaglia
several years later. The solution was published by Girolamo
Cardano in his Ars
magna in 1545, together with Lodovico Ferrari's solution of the quartic
equation.
By 1380 an algebraic symbolism had been developed in Italy
in which letters were used for the unknown, for its square, and for constants.
The symbols used today for the unknown (for example, x), the square root
sign, and the signs + and - came into general use in southern Germany beginning
in about 1450. They were used by Regiomontanus and by Fridericus Gerhart and
received an impetus in about 1486 at the University of Leipzig from Johann Widman.
The idea of distinguishing between known and unknown quantities in algebra
was first consistently applied by François Viète, with vowels for unknown and
consonants for known quantities. Viète found some relations between the coefficients
of an equation and its roots. This was suggestive of the idea, explicitly stated
by Albert Girard in 1629 and proved by Gauss in 1799, that an equation of degree
n has n roots. Complex
numbers, which are implicit in such ideas, were gradually accepted about
the time of Rafael Bombelli (d. 1572), who used them in connection with the
cubic.
Apollonius' Conics and the investigations of areas (quadratures)
and of volumes (cubatures) of Archimedes formed part of the humanistic learning
of the 16th century. These studies strongly influenced the later developments
of analytic geometry, the infinitesimal calculus, and the theory of functions,
subjects that were developed in the 17th century.
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