Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-xtgtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T14:41:28.762Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pioneers in Optics: René Descartes and Jan Albertus Magnus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

Michael W. Davidson*
Affiliation:
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306

Abstract

Type
Microscopy Pioneers
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2014 

René Descartes

(1596–1650)

René Descartes is often referred to as the father of modern philosophy for his revolutionary breach from Aristotelian thought. In its place he attempted to establish a dualistic system that rested on a clear distinction between the mind, the origin of thought, and matter. He is, perhaps, most commonly remembered for his philosophical declaration, “Cogito, ergo sum” (I think, therefore I am). However, in addition to his many philosophical reflections, Descartes made significant contributions to mathematics and the sciences, including optics.

Born in La Haye, France, on March 31, 1596, Descartes was raised in a family of minor nobility. His father served in parlement and his mother died when he was still an infant. Though his father remarried, Descartes and his siblings were reared by their maternal grandmother and a nurse. In his youth, Descartes was educated at a Jesuit school and dis-played an exceptional mental capacity. He graduated from college at the age of eighteen and had received a law degree by 1616, perhaps with the intention of entering parlement like his father.

Descartes spent the period from 1618 to 1628 traveling extensively throughout Europe, at times a member of various military units. Though he was not often involved in combat, Descartes did come into contact with various notable intellectuals, such as physicist Isaac Beeckman who encouraged his scientific and mathematical pursuits. Perhaps even more influential on Descartes's life, however, was a set of three dreams he had in 1619, which he interpreted as a sign that all science was unified and could therefore be mastered by a single person if a correct method of knowing, or reasoning, was established. The majority of his life was dedicated to demonstrating that he had discovered such a method.

In 1629, Descartes settled at the university at Franeker, where he wrote the first draft of his philosophical work Meditations. Then, in 1630, he enrolled at the University of Leiden but left the following year to travel through Denmark and Germany, continuing correspondence with various scholars. By 1633 he was ready to publish The World but received information regarding the condemnation of Galileo Galilei for a publication supporting the notion that the Earth revolved around the sun. Because the same Copernican idea was central to The World, Descartes decided to delay its publication to a time when it might be received with more enthusiasm, or at least not mortal danger to himself. The work was eventually released in 1664, many years after the death of its author.

Descartes, however, did write many other works during his lifetime, including his Discourse on Method, published in 1637. The work contained an introductory section that outlined four general rules for using analysis to reduce any problem into its fundamental parts and included a synthesis to construct solutions. This was followed by three appendices, “Dioptrics,” “Meteors,” and “Geometry,” which were meant to act as illustrations of Descartes's rules of reasoning. Two of these three works contain the bulk of Descartes's contribution to the field of optics.

Within “Dioptrics” Descartes breaks down the problem of designing optical instruments, beginning by defining light and the human eye. During his examination of the nature of light, he provides the law of refraction, discovered independently from Willebrord Snell. Descartes then progresses to consider ways that eyesight might be enhanced, discussing different forms of instruments and lenses. Once he determines that a hyperbolic lens is the best type for use in telescopes, he describes how to construct a machine with which such lenses could be created.

The appendix known as “Meteors” is an examination of various meteorological phenomena, some of which also involve optics. In particular, Descartes offers a detailed theory of rainbows, which he supports through numerous inventive experiments. One of the more notable experiments successfully equates the colors of a rainbow with the colors that occur when light travels through a prism. This finding was later used by Isaac Newton, who explained the breakdown of sunlight into a succession of colors.

In his attempts to provide an understanding of knowledge to the world, Descartes completed a number of other significant works. He wrote Rules for the Direction of the Human Mind by 1628, but it was, like The World, published posthumously. However, in 1641 Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy in Which Is Proved the Existence of God and the Immortality of the Soul was released, followed in 1644 by Principles of Philosophy.

Descartes's numerous contributions garnered him a certain amount of fame during his lifetime, which sometimes had a detrimental effect on him due to the unfavorable political and religious climate of the period. In September 1649, due to a variety of factors, Descartes accepted a request to act as philosophy instructor for Christina, the young, but powerful, Queen of Sweden. Particularly demanding, she required him to provide her daily lessons at 5:00 a.m., though it interfered with his meditation schedule and obliged him to compose various works in her honor, including a ballet in verse. While fulfilling one of his early morning appointments with her, Descartes caught a chill and developed pneumonia, dying ten days later on February 11, 1650.

Albertus Magnus

(1193–1280)

Albertus Magnus, also known as Albert the Great, was a scholar, philosopher, bishop, and doctor of the Church, as well as the teacher of St. Thomas Aquinas. Canonized in 1931, he was declared the patron saint of the natural sciences, a fitting role considering his tremendous influence in the field.

Albertus was born in Lauingen, Swabia, around the year 1193, although some sources place his date of birth in the thirteenth century. He came from a family that was included among the lower echelons of nobility and was educated at the University of Padua in Italy. Joining the Dominican order of mendicant friars in 1223, Albertus then studied theology in Germany. Later he became the first German Dominican to rise to the master of theology post at the University of Paris. It was therethat he was introduced to the works of Aristotle, which were newly translated into Latin from Arabic and Greek. Heavily influenced by the writings, throughout his life Albertus attempted to integrate Aristotelian thought and the philosophy of the Church.

Most likely while still living in Paris, Albertus began a long and prolific career of writing. He composed commentaries of the Bible and the theological textbook Sentences, as well as on all of the works of Aristotle that were available to him. He also began recording the entire body of knowledge contained in the fields of the natural sciences. An astute observer, Albertus not only described and classified information he obtained from other sources, but also often added his own interpretations and beliefs. As he once wrote, “Science does not consist simply in believing what we are told, but in inquiring into the nature of things.”

During his pursuit of science, Albertus touched on a number of subjects and phenomena, including the nature of light. He was particularly interested in the formation of rainbows and wrote on the subject with enthusiasm. He also hypothesized that the speed of light was finite though it could travel extremely fast, and he examined the darkening action of bright sunlight on crystals of silver nitrate. Furthermore, looking out at the night sky, Albertus determined that the Milky Way was just an immense assembly of stars that received the light of the sun and argued that figures visible on the face of the moon were configurations on its surface, rather than a reflection of the Earth’s seas and mountains, as had been previously believed. He also studied the reflection of light through the use mirrors, as well as the refraction capabilities of certain crystals.

A leading scholar of the day, Albertus’s examination of optics and other scientific fields was perhaps only exceeded by one of his contemporaries, Roger Bacon. In fact, his deep exploration of the sciences led some to accuse him of neglecting his duties to the Church and others to claim he was involved in necromancy. However, Albertus did not see science and the Church as being in opposition, claiming that real truth was in harmony with both worlds. Through his stringent efforts and voluminous writings, he helped legitimatize the combination of reason and religion, paving a safe path for many future scientists to travel.