1583 in science
The year 1583 in science and technology included a number of events, some of which are listed here.
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Botany
- Carolus Clusius publishes Rariorum stirpium per Pannonias observatorum Historiae, the earliest book on Alpine flora.[1]
Mathematics
- Thomas Fincke's Geometria rotundi is published, introducing the terms tangent and secant for trigonometric functions.
- Johann Thomas Freigius' Quaestiones geometricae et stereometricae Euclidis is published in Basel following his death (January 16) from plague.
Physiology and medicine
- Georg Bartisch's Ophthalmodouleia, Das ist Augendienst is published in Dresden, the first modern work on ophthalmology.
Births
- February 23 – Jean-Baptiste Morin, French mathematician, astronomer, and astrologer (died 1656)
Deaths
- December 31 – Thomas Erastus, Swiss physician and theologian (born 1524)
gollark: It's something like 8 characters, and does a clever thing to match any number (in unary) with factors other than 1 and itself. It also probably makes regex engines suffer horribly.
gollark: You can implement a primality checker quite easily with backreferences or something.
gollark: Probably not with strictly regular regular expressions, possibly with the extended ones everyone uses.
gollark: I'd say it's more that most mainstream languages use basically the same set of approved concepts.
gollark: Unfortunately, apparently no mainstream language is remotely aware of most useful language features which aren't just mildly extended C or OOP.
References
- Egmond, Florike (2010). The World of Carolus Clusius: Natural History in the Making, 1550-1610. London: Pickering & Chatto. ISBN 1-84893-008-9.
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