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Brook Taylor

From Wikiquote
Brook Taylor
engraved 1825 by J.W. Cook
afterRichard Earlom

Brook Taylor (18 August168529 December1731) was an English mathematician and secretary of the Royal Society of London, most famous forTaylor's theorem and theTaylor series.

Quotes

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It is generally thought very ridiculous to pretend to write anHeroicPoem, or a fine Discourse upon any Subject, withoutunderstanding the Propriety of theLanguage wrote in; and to me it seems no less ridiculous for one to pretend to make a good Picture without understandingPerspective...
Thetrue and best way oflearning anyArt, is not to see a great manyExamples done by another Person, but to possess ones seIf first of thePrinciples of it, and then to make them familiar, byexercising onesself in thePractice. For it is Practice alone, that makes aManperfect in any thing.

New Principles of Linear Perspective (1715, 1749)

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Or the Art of Designing on a Plane, the Representations of All Sorts of Objects, in a More General and Simple Method Than Has Been Hitherto Done
Methodus incrementorum directa et inversa, 1715
  • Considering how few, and how simple the Principles are, upon which the whole Art ofPERSPECTIVE depends, and withal how useful, nay how absolutely necessary this Art is to all forts ofDesigning; I have often wonder'd, that it has still been left in so low a degree of Perfection, as it is found to be, in the Books that have been hitherto wrote upon it.
  • It seems that those, who have hitherto treated of this Subject, have been more conversant in the Practice of Designing, than in the Principles ofGeometry... that might have enabled them to render the Principles of it moreuniversal, and more convenient for Practice. In this Book I have endeavour'd to do this; and have done my utmost to render the Principles of theArt as general, and as universal as may be, and to devise such Constructions, as might be the most simple and useful in Practice.
  • In order to this,I found it absolutely necessary to consider this Subject entirely anew, as if it had never been treated of before; the Principles of the old Perspective being so narrow, and so confined, that they could be of no use in my Design:And I was forced to invent new Terms of Art, those already in use being so peculiarly adapted to the imperfect Notions that have hitherto been had of this Art, that I could make no use of them in explaining those general Principles I intended to establish.
  • I make no difference between thePlane of theHorizon, and any other Plane whatsoever; for since Planes, as Planes, are alike in Geometry, it is most proper to consider them as so, and to explain their Properties in general, leaving the Artist himself to apply them in particular Cases, as Occasion requires.
  • The true and best way of learning any Art, is not to see a great many Examples done by another Person, but to possess ones self first of thePrinciples of it, and then to make them familiar, by exercising ones self in thePractice. For it is Practice alone, that makes aManperfect in any thing.
  • I have endeavour'd to make every thing so plain, that a very little Skill in Geometry may be sufficient to enable one to read this Book by himself.
  • And upon this occasionI would advise all my Readers, who desire to make themselves Masters of this Subject,not to be contented with the Schemes they find here; but upon every Occasionto draw new ones of their own, in all the Variety of Circumstances they can think of.This will take up a little more Time at first; but in a little whilethey will find the vast Benefit of it,by the extensive Notions it will give themof the Nature of thesePrinciples.
  • The Art Perspective is necessary to all Arts, where there is any occasion for Designing... but it is more particularly necessary to the ArtPainting...
  • It is generally thought very ridiculous to pretend to write an Heroic Poem, or a fine Discourse upon any Subject, without understanding thePropriety of the Language wrote in; and to me it seems no less ridiculous for one to pretend to make a good Picture without understanding Perspective...
  • The Greatest Masters have been the most guilty... The great Occasion of this Fault, is certainly the wrong Method that generally is used intheEducation of Persons to this Art:For the Young People are generally put immediately to Drawing, and when they have acquired a Facility in that, they are put to Colouring. And these things they learn by rote, and by Practice only; butare not at all instructed in anyRules of Art. By which means when they come to make any Designs of their own, tho' they... don't know how to govern their Inventions withJudgment, and become guilty of so many gross Mistakes, which prevent themselves, as well as others, from finding thatSatisfaction, they otherwise would do in theirPerformances.
  • I would recommend it to the Masters of the Art Painting... to establish a better Method for the Education of their Scholars, and tobegin their Instructions with the Technical Parts of Painting, before they let them loose to follow the Inventions of their own uncultivated Imaginations.
  • [T]he Method which ought to be follow'd in instructing a Scholar in the Executive Part of Painting; ...first have him learn the most commonEffections of PracticalGeometry, and the first Elements ofPlain Geometry, and commonArithmetic.
  • When he is sufficiently perfect in these, I would have him learnPerspective. And when he has made some progress in this, so as to have prepared his Judgment with the right Notions of the Alterations that Figures must undergo, when they come to be drawn on a Flat, he may then be put to Drawing by View, and be exercised in this along with Perspective, till he comes to be sufficiently perfect in both.
  • Nothing ought to be more familiar to a Painter than Perspective; for it is the only thing that can make theJudgment correct, and will help the Fancy to invent with ten times the ease that it could do without it.
  • [H]e should be instructed in theTheory of the Colours; that he should learn... their particular Properties... Relations, and... Effects that are produced by their Mixture; and that he should be made well acquainted with the Nature of the several material Colours... used in Painting.
  • [T]he Theory I have endeavour'd to explain in the Appendix, from SirIsaac Newton, may be of very great use to Learners.
    • Ref:Isaac Newton,Opticks: or, A Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light (1704)
  • There may be regular Methods also invented for teaching the Doctrine of Light and Shadow; and other Particulars relating to the Practical Part of Painting, may be improved and digested into proper Methods... But I only hint at these... recommending them to the Masters of the Art to reflect and improve upon.
  • The Book it self is so short, that I need not detain the Reader any longer in the Preface...

An Attempt towards the Improvement of the Method of approximating, in the Extraction of the Roots of Equations in Numbers (1717)

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Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, (June, 1717) Volume 30, Issue 352, pp 610-622.@RoyalSocietyPublishing.org.@Archive.org.
  • Dr. Halley..., has publish'd a... compendious and useful Method ofextracting the Roots of affected Equations of the common Form, in Numbers. This Method proceeds by assuming theRoot desired nearly true... (...by aGeometrical Construction, or by some other convenient way) and correcting the Assumption by comparing the Difference between the true Root and the assumed, by means of a new Equation whose Root is that Difference, and which he shews how to form from the Equation proposed, by Substitution of the Value of the Root sought, partly in known and partly in unknown Terms.
  • In doing this he makes use of a Table of Products (...he callsSpeculum Analyticum,) by which he computes the Coefficients in the new Equation for finding the Difference mentioned. This Table, I observed, was formed in the same Manner from the Equation propos'd, as theFluxions are, taking the Root sought for the only flowing Quantity, its Fluxion for Unity, and after every Operation dividing the Product successively by the Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4,etc.
  • Hence I soon found that this Method might easily and naturally be drawn fromCor 2. Prop. 7. of myMethodus Incrementorum, and that it was capable of a further degree of Generality; it being Applicable, not only to Equations of the common Form, (viz. such as consist of Terms wherein the Powers of the Root sought are positive and integral, without any Radical Sign) but also to all Expressions in general, wherein any thing is proposed as given which by any known Method might be computed; if vice versâ, the Root were consider'd as given: such as are all Radical Expressions ofBinomials,Trinomials, or of any otherNomial, which may be computed by the Root given, at least byLogarithms, whatever be the Index of the Power of that Nomial; as likewise Expressions of Logarithms, of Arches by theSines orTangents, of Areas of Curves by theAbscissa's or any otherFluents, or Roots ofFluxional Equations,etc.
x+x˙v1+x¨v212+{\displaystyle x+{\frac {{\dot {x}}v}{1}}+{\frac {{\ddot {x}}v^{2}}{1\cdot 2}}+} ...etc. forz˙{\displaystyle {\dot {z}}} putting 1.
  • [I]t may not be amiss to set down here two Approximations I have formerly hit upon. The one is a Series of Terms for expressing the Root of any Quadratick Equation; and the other is a particular Method of Approximating in theinvention of Logarithms, which has no occasion for any of theTranscendental Methods, and is expeditious enough for making the Tables without much trouble.

Quotes about Taylor

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  • Early in 1717 he returned to London, and composed three treatises, which were presented to the Royal Society, and published in the 30th volume of the Transactions. About this time his intense application had impaired his health to a considerable degree; and he was under the necessity of repairing, for relaxation and relief, toAix-la-Chapelle. Having likewise a desire of directing his attention to subjects moral and religious speculation, he resigned his office of secretary to the Royal Society in 1718. After this he applied to subjects of a very different kind. Among his papers were found detached parts of a Treatise on the Jewish Sacrifices, and a dissertation of considerable length on the Lawfulness of eating Blood. He did not, however, wholly neglect his former subjects of study, but employed his leisure hours in combining science and art; with this view he revised and improved his treatise on Linear Perspective.
  • Drawing continued to be his favourite amusement to his latest hour; and it is not improbable that his valuable life was shortened by the sedentary habits which this amusement, succeeding his severer studies, occasioned.
  • The theory of perspective was taught in painting schools from the sixteenth century onward according to principles laid down by the masters... However, their treatises on perspective had on the whole been precept, rule, and ad hoc procedure; they lacked a solid mathematical basis. In the period from 1500 to 1600 artists and subsequently mathematicians put the subject on a satisfactory deductive basis, and it passed from quasi-empirical art to a true science. Definitive works on perspective were written much later by eighteenth-century mathematicians Brook Taylor andJ. H. Lambert.
    • Morris Kline,Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times (1972)
  • Brook Taylor... in hisMethodus Incrementorum Directa et Inversa (1715), sought to clarify the ideas of the calculus but limited himself to algebraic functions and algebraic differential equations. ...Taylor's exposition, based on what we would callfinite differences, failed to obtain many backers because it was arithmetical in nature when the British were trying to tie the calculus to geometry or to the physical notion of velocity.
    • Morris Kline,Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times (1972)
  • TheGregory-Newton interpolation formula was used by Brook Taylor to develop the most powerful single method for expanding a function into an infinite series. In hisMethodus Incrementorum Directa et Inversa Taylor derived the theorem... he praisesNewton but makes no mention ofLeibniz's work of 1673 on finite differences, though Taylor knew this work.Taylor's theorem was known toJames Gregory in 1670 and was known... by Leibnez, however these two men did not pubish it.John Bernoulli did publish practically the same result in theActa Eruditorium of 1694; and though Taylor knew his result he did not refer to it. ...Colin Maclaurin in hisTreatise of Fluxions (1742) stated that... [Mclaurin's theorem] was but a special case of Taylor's result.
    • Morris Kline,Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times (1972)
  • I am spared the necessity of closing this biographical sketch with a prolix detail of his character:in the best acceptation of duties relative to each situation of life in which he was engaged, his own writings and the writings of those who best knew him, prove him to have been the finished Christian, gentleman, and scholar.
    • Sir William Young,Contemplatio Philosophica, a posthumous work of the late Brook Taylor, L.L.D., F.R.S., some time secretary of the Royal Society as quoted by Good, Gregory & Bosworth, "Taylor (Dr. Brook)" inPantologia (1813) Vol.11

External links

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Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Wikipedia has an article about:
  • Charles Knight, ed., "Taylor, Brook,"Biography: Or, Third Division of "The English Encyclopedia"Vol.5, p.927
  • Brook Taylor,New Principles of Linear Perspective (1749)
  • John Mason Good,Olinthus Gregory, Newton Bosworth, "Taylor (Dr. Brook)" inPantologia: A New Cyclopaedia, Comprehending a Complete Series of Essays, Treatises, and Systems, Alphabetically Arranged; with a General Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Words (1813)Vol.11
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