1713 in science

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The year 1713 in science and technology involved some significant events.

Astronomy

Mathematics

  • September 9 – Nicolas Bernoulli first describes the St. Petersburg paradox in a letter to Pierre Raymond de Montmort.
  • November 13 – James Waldegrave provides the first known minimax mixed strategy solution to a two-person game, in a letter to de Montmort.{{cite web|title=A Chronology of Game Theory|first=Paul|last=Walker|url=http://www.econ.canterbury.ac.nz/personal_pages/paul_walker/gt/hist.htm|work=History of Game Theory|accessdate=2012-05-12|date=October 2005|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000815223335/http://www.economics.harvard.edu/~aroth/alroth.html|archive-date=2000-08-15|url-status=dead}}
  • Jacob Bernoulli's best known work, Ars Conjectandi (The Art of Conjecture), is published posthumously by his nephew. It contains a mathematical proof of the law of large numbers, the Bernoulli numbers, and other important research in probability theory and enumeration.

Medicine

  • William Cheselden publishes Anatomy of the Human Body and it becomes a popular work on anatomy, at least in part due to it being written in English rather than Latin.
  • Italian Bernardino Ramazzini provides one of the first descriptions of task-specific dystonia in his book of occupational diseases, Morbis Artificum,Ramazzini B. Diseases of Workers. Translated from De Morbis Artificum of 1713 by Wilmer Cave Wright. New York: Haffner, 1964. noting in chapter II of its Supplementum that "Scribes and Notaries" may develop "incessant movement of the hand, always in the same direction … the continuous and almost tonic strain on the muscles... that results in failure of power in the right hand".

Physics

Technology

Births

Deaths

References