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Linné on line arrow Mathematics in Linnaeus’ time arrow "our honest Klingenstierna" arrow Klingenstierna's writings

Klingenstierna's writings

One reason Klingenstierna is nearly forgotten as a mathematician is his unwillingness to see his writings into print. He took part in the publishing of two books, a Latin version of Euclid's Elements in 1741 and six years later an annotated translation of Peter van Musschenbroek's Elementa Physica with the Swedish title of Inledning til Naturkunnigheten (Introduction to Understanding Nature).

ElementsInledning til Naturkunnigheten (Introduction to Understanding Nature)

In Klingenstierna's foreword to Inledning till Naturkunnigheten we can read:

"I am certain that Mister Musschenbroek would not begrudge that in some of my comments on this lovely work I am of another opinion than he, in as much as I have regarded his Physica as the Principal Book of its kind, the Swedish Translation of which could in the highest degree benefit and edify not only the Youth of the Fatherland but also more mature persons, of all ranks and circumstances."

Klingenstierna wrote 20 articles in scientific journals. Roughly half of them were written in Swedish for the proceedings of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (abbreviated KVA in Swedish).

In Mathematiskt Spörsmål, om en kroklinie, som återförer en ljusstråle, efter tvänne reflexioner til, des ursprung (Mathematical matters, on a curved line that returns a ray of light, after two reflections, to its origin) (KVA's proceedings 1749), Klingenstierna solves a problem that Euler had presented in 1745 in Acta Eruditorum. There were other mathematicians who had solved the problem, but they had used, as Klingenstierna says, "Calculatory methods." Instead, he demonstrates a solution "that merely by looking at the figure, without calculation, goes straight to the purpose."

He then explains why he prefers geometric solutions to algebraic ones.

Under Klingenstierna's presidency just over 70 dissertations were printed and ventilated during the years 1731–1752, many of which he had written himself. These dissertations were primarily in the realms of mathematics and physics, but several of them address philosophical matters.

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