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Pascal Blaise
Biography
Blaise Pascal was born at Clermont on June 19, 1623, and died at
Paris on Aug. 19, 1662. His father, a local judge at Clermont, and himself of
some scientific reputation, moved to Paris in 1631, partly to prosecute his own
scientific studies, partly to carry on the education of his only son, who had
already displayed exceptional ability. Pascal was kept at home in order to
ensure his not being overworked, and with the same object it was directed that
his education should be at first confined to the study of languages, and should
not include any mathematics. This naturally excited the boy's curiosity, and one
day, being then twelve years old, he asked in what geometry consisted. His tutor
replied that it was the science of constructing exact figures and of determining
the proportions between their different parts. Pascal, stimulated no doubt by
the injunction against reading it, gave up his play-time to this new study, and
in a few weeks had discovered for himself many properties of figures, and in
particular the proposition that the sum of the angles of a triangle is equal to
two right angles. I have read somewhere, but I cannot lay my hand on the
authority, that his proof merely consisted in turning the angular points of a
triangular piece of paper over so as to meet in the centre of the inscribed
circle: a similar demonstration can be got by turning the angular points over so
as to meet at the foot of the perpendicular drawn from the biggest angle to the
opposite side. His father, struck by this display of ability, gave him a copy of
Euclid's Elements, a book which Pascal read with avidity and soon
mastered.
At the age of fourteen he was admitted to the weekly meetings of Roberval,
Mersenne, Mydorge, and other French geometricians; from which, ultimately, the
French Academy sprung. At sixteen Pascal wrote an essay on conic sections; and
in 1641, at the age of eighteen, he constructed the first arithmetical machine,
an instrument which, eight years later, he further improved. His correspondence
with Fermat about this time shews that he was then turning his attention to
analytical geometry and physics. He repeated Torricelli's experiments, by which
the pressure of the atmosphere could be estimated as a weight, and he confirmed
his theory of the cause of barometrical variations by obtaining at the same
instant readings at different altitudes on the hill of Puy-de-Dфme.
In 1650, when in the midst of these researches, Pascal suddenly abandoned his
favourite pursuits to study religion, or, as he says in his
Pensйes, ``contemplate the greatness and the misery of man''; and
about the same time he persuaded the younger of his two sisters to enter the
Port Royal society.
In 1653 he had to administer his father's estate. He now took up his old life
again, and made several experiments on the pressure exerted by gases and
liquids; it was also about this period that he invented the arithmetical
triangle, and together with Fermat created the calculus of probabilities. He was
meditating marriage when an accident again turned the current of his thoughts to
a religious life. He was driving a four-in-hand on November 23, 1654, when the
horses ran away; the two leaders dashed over the parapet of the bridge at
Neuilly, and Pascal was saved only by the traces breaking. Always somewhat of a
mystic, he considered this a special summons to abandon the world. He wrote an
account of the accident on a small piece of parchment, which for the rest of his
life he wore next to his heart, to perpetually remind him of his covenant; and
shortly moved to Port Royal, where he continued to live until his death in 1662.
Constitutionally delicate, he had injured his health by his incessant study;
from the age of seventeen or eighteen he suffered from insomnia and acute
dyspepsia, and at the time of his death was physically worn out.
His famous Provincial Letters directed against the Jesuits, and
his Pensйes, were written towards the close of his life, and are
the first example of that finished form which is characteristic of the best
French literature. The only mathematical work that he produced after retiring to
Port Royal was the essay on the cycloid in 1658. He was suffering from
sleeplessness and toothache when the idea occurred to him, and to his surprise
his teeth immediately ceased to ache. Regarding this as a divine intimation to
proceed with the problem, he worked incessantly for eight days at it, and
completed a tolerably full account of the geometry of the cycloid.
I now proceed to consider his mathematical works in rather greater detail.
His early essay on the geometry of conics, written in 1639, but not
published till 1779, seems to have been founded on the teaching of Desargues.
Two of the results are important as well as interesting. The first of these is
the theorem known now as ``Pascal's Theorem,'' namely, that if a hexagon be
inscribed in a conic, the points of intersection of the opposite sides will lie
in a straight line. The second, which is really due to Desargues, is that if a
quadrilateral be inscribed in a conic, and a straight line be drawn cutting the
sides taken in order in the points A, B, C, and D,
and the conic in P and Q, then
PA.PC : PB.PD = QA.QC : QB.QD.
Pascal employed his arithmetical triangle in 1653, but no account of
his method was printed till 1665. The triangle is constructed as in the figure
below, each horizontal line being formed form the one above it by making every
number in it equal to the sum of those above and to the left of it in the row
immediately above it; ex. gr. the fourth number in the fourth line,
namely, 20, is equal to 1 + 3 + 6 + 10.
The numbers in each line are what are now called figurate
numbers. Those in the first line are called numbers of the first order; those in
the second line, natural numbers or numbers of the second order; those in the
third line, numbers of the third order, and so on. It is easily shewn that the
mth number in the nth row is (m+n-2)! / (m-1)!(n-1)!
Pascal's arithmetical triangle, to any required order, is got by drawing a
diagonal downwards from right to left as in the figure. The numbers in any
diagonal give the coefficients of the expansion of a binomial; for example, the
figures in the fifth diagonal, namely 1, 4, 6, 4, 1, are the coefficients of the
expansion . Pascal used the triangle
partly for this purpose, and partly to find the numbers of combinations of
m things taken n at a time, which he stated, correctly, to be
(n+1)(n+2)(n+3) ... m / (m-n)!
Perhaps as a mathematician Pascal is best known in connection with his
correspondence with Fermat in 1654 in which he laid down the principles of the
theory of probabilities. This correspondence arose from a problem
proposed by a gamester, the Chevalier de Mйrй, to Pascal, who communicated it to
Fermat. The problem was this. Two players of equal skill want to leave the table
before finishing their game. Their scores and the number of points which
constitute the game being given, it is desired to find in what proportion they
should divide the stakes. Pascal and Fermat agreed on the answer, but gave
different proofs. The following is a translation of Pascal's solution. That of
Fermat is given later.
The following is my method for determining the share of each
player when, for example, two players play a game of three points and each
player has staked 32 pistoles.
Suppose that the first player has gained two points, and the second player
one point; they have now to play for a point on this condition, that, if the
first player gain, he takes all the money which is at stake, namely, 64
pistoles; while, if the second player gain, each player has two points, so
that there are on terms of equality, and, if they leave off playing, each
ought to take 32 pistoles. Thus if the first player gain, then 64 pistoles
belong to him, and if he lose, then 32 pistoles belong to him. If therefore
the players do not wish to play this game but to separate without playing it,
the first player would say to the second, ``I am certain of 32 pistoles even
if I lose this game, and as for the other 32 pistoles perhaps I will have them
and perhaps you will have them; the chances are equal. Let us then divide
these 32 pistoles equally, and give me also the 32 pistoles of which I am
certain.'' Thus the first player will have 48 pistoles and the second 16
pistoles.
Next, suppose that the first player has gained two points and the second
player none, and that they are about to play for a point; the condition then
is that, if the first player gain this point, he secures the game and takes
the 64 pistoles, and, if the second player gain this point, then the players
will be in the situation already examined, in which the first player is
entitled to 48 pistoles and the second to 16 pistoles. Thus if they do not
wish to play, the first player would say to the second, ``If I gain the point
I gain 64 pistoles; if I lose it, I am entitled to 48 pistoles. Give me then
the 48 pistoles of which I am certain, and divide the other 16 equally, since
our chances of gaining the point are equal.'' Thus the first player will have
56 pistoles and the second player 8 pistoles.
Finally, suppose that the first player has gained one point and the second
player none. If they proceed to play for a point, the condition is that, if
the first player gain it, the players will be in the situation first examined,
in which the first player is entitled to 56 pistoles; if the first player lose
the point, each player has then a point, and each is entitled to 32 pistoles.
Thus, if they do not wish to play, the first player would say to the second,
``Give me the 32 pistoles of which I am certain, and divide the remainder of
the 56 pistoles equally, that is divide 24 pistoles equally.'' Thus the first
player will have the sum of 32 and 12 pistoles, that is, 44 pistoles, and
consequently the second will have 20 pistoles.
Pascal proceeds next to consider the similar problems when the game is won by
whoever first obtains m + n points, and one player has m
while the other has n points. The answer is obtained using the
arithmetical triangle. The general solution (in which the skill of the players
is unequal) is given in many modern text-books on algebra, and agrees with
Pascal's result, though of course the notation of the latter is different and
less convenient.
Pascal made an illegitimate use of the new theory in the seventh chapter of
his Pensйes. In effect, he puts his argument that, as the value of
eternal happiness must be infinite, then, even if the probability of a religious
life ensuring eternal happiness be very small, still the expectation (which is
measured by the product of the two) must be of sufficient magnitude to make it
worth while to be religious. The argument, if worth anything, would apply
equally to any religion which promised eternal happiness to those who accepted
its doctrines. If any conclusion may be drawn from the statement, it is the
undersirability of applying mathematics to questions of morality of which some
of the data are necessarily outside the range of an exact science. It is only
fair to add that no one had more contempt than Pascal for those who changes
their opinions according to the prospect of material benefit, and this isolated
passage is at variance with the spirit of his writings.
The last mathematical work of Pascal was that on the cycloid in
1658. The cycloid is the curve traced out by a point on the circumference of a
circular hoop which rolls along a straight line. Galileo, in 1630, had called
attention to this curve, the shape of which is particularly graceful, and had
suggested that the arches of bridges should be built in this form. Four years
later, in 1634, Roberval found the area of the cycloid; Descartes thought little
of this solution and defied him to find its tangents, the same challenge being
also sent to Fermat who at once solved the problem. Several questions connected
with the curve, and with the surface and volume generated by its revolution
about its axis, base, or the tangent at its vertex, were then proposed by
various mathematicians. These and some analogous question, as well as the
positions of the centres of the mass of the solids formed, were solved by Pascal
in 1658, and the results were issued as a challenge to the world, Wallis
succeeded in solving all the questions except those connected with the centre of
mass. Pascal's own solutions were effected by the method of indivisibles, and
are similar to those which a modern mathematician would give by the aid of the
integral calculus. He obtained by summation what are equivalent to the integrals
of , , and , one limit being
either 0 or . He also investigated
the geometry of the Archimedean spiral. These researches, according to
D'Alembert, form a connecting link between the geometry of Archimedes and the
infinitesimal calculus of Newton.
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