Blaise pascal contributions to mathematics

Chevalier de mere biography of barack obama This page was last modified on 16 October , at Home People Antoine Gombaud Biography. How should the stake be divided among them if, say, one has won three games and the other has won one? Gombaud was an important Salon theorist.

Antoine Gombaud facts for kids

Antoine Gombaud, alias Chevalier de Méré, ( – 29 December ) was a French writer, born in Poitou. Although he was not a nobleman, he adopted the title chevalier (knight) for the character in his dialogues who represented his own views (chevalier de Méré because he was educated at Méré).

Later his friends began calling him by that name.

Life

Gombaud was an important Salon theorist. Like many 17th century liberal thinkers, he distrusted both hereditary power and democracy, a stance at odds with his self-bestowed noble title. He believed that questions are best resolved in open discussions among witty, fashionable, intelligent people.

Gombaud's most famous essays are L'honnête homme (The Honest Man) and Discours de la vraie honnêteté (Discourse on True Honesty), but he is far better known for his contribution to probability theory.

He was an amateur mathematician who became interested in a problem that dates to medieval times, if not earlier, the problem of the points.

Chevalier de mere biography of barack Categories : French essayists 17th-century French mathematicians French probability theorists births deaths 17th-century French writers 17th-century French male writers French male essayists. He believed that questions are best resolved in open discussions among witty, fashionable, intelligent people. Works by or about Antoine Gombaud at the Internet Archive. Home People Antoine Gombaud Biography.

Suppose two players agree to play a certain number of games, say a best-of-seven series, and are interrupted before they can finish. How should the stake be divided among them if, say, one has won three games and the other has won one?

In keeping with his Salon methods, Gombaud enlisted the Mersenne salon to solve it.

Two famous mathematicians, Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat, took up the challenge. In a series of letters they laid the foundation for the modern theory of probability.

Gombaud claimed that he had discovered probability theory himself, a claim not taken seriously by the mathematicians involved. He also claimed that his probability calculations showed that mathematics was inconsistent, and argued elsewhere that mathematicians were wrong in thinking that lines are infinitely divisible.

Works

The spelling used here is that of the edition of the complete works (Œuvres complètes) by Éditions Fernand Roche.

Philosophical works

  • Les Conversations ;
  • Discours de la Justesse ;
  • Des Agrémens ;
  • De l'Esprit ;
  • De la Conversation ;
  • Le jeu de l'hombre, Paris, Barbin, (anonymous) ; 2nd edn., revised,
  • Posthumous works:
    • De la vraïe honneteté,
    • Suite de la vraïe honneteté,
    • De l'Eloquence et de l'Entretien,
    • De la Delicatesse dans les choses et l'Expression,
    • Le Commerce du monde,
    • Suite du Commerce du monde.

Novels

  • Les Avantures de Renaud et d'Armide

Poetry

  • A une dame trop curieuse de sa parure ;
  • Madrigal.

See also

In Spanish: Antoine Gombaud para niños