Gabriel Cramer

{{short description|Genevan mathematician}}

{{about|a mathematician|the publisher of the same name|Cramer brothers}}

{{Infobox scientist

| name = Gabriel Cramer

| image = Gabriel Cramer.jpg

| image_size =

| caption = Cramer {{circa|1750}}

| birth_date = 31 July 1704

| birth_place = Geneva, Republic of Geneva

| death_date = 4 January 1752 (age 47)

| death_place = Bagnols-sur-Cèze, France

| field = Mathematics and physics

| work_institutions = Academy of Geneva

| alma_mater = Academy of Geneva

| doctoral_advisor =

| doctoral_students =

| known_for = Cramer's rule
Cramer's theorem for algebraic curves
Cramer's paradox

| prizes =

| footnotes =

}}

Gabriel Cramer ({{IPA|fr|kʁamɛʁ|lang}}; 31 July 1704 – 4 January 1752) was a Genevan mathematician.

Biography

Cramer was born on 31 July 1704 in Geneva, Republic of Geneva to Jean-Isaac Cramer, a physician, and Anne Mallet.{{HDS|25878|Cramer, Gabriel|author=Paul Chaix|date=17 August 2005}} The progenitor of the Cramer family in Geneva was Jean-Ulrich Cramer, Gabriel's great-grandfather, who immigrated from Strasbourg in 1634.{{HDS|25496|Cramer (GE)|author=Barbara Roth|date=16 March 2004}} Cramer's mother, a member of the Mallet family, was of Huguenot origin.{{HDS|25530|Mallet|author=Jean de Senarclens|date=29 January 2008}} Cramer showed promise in mathematics from an early age. In 1722, aged 18, he received his doctorate from the Academy of Geneva, and at 20 he was made co-chair (along with Jean-Louis Calandrini){{efn|He did not get the chair of philosophy he had been a candidate for; but the Academy was so impressed by him that it created a chair of mathematics for him and for his friend Jean-Louis Calandrini; the two alternated as chairs}} of mathematics at the Academy.

He became the sole professor of mathematics in 1734 and was appointed professor of philosophy at the Academy in 1750. Cramer was also involved in the politics of the Republic of Geneva, entering first the Council of Two Hundred in 1734 then the Council of Sixty in 1750. He was a member of the science academies of Bologna, Lyon, and Montpellier, as well as a foreign member of the Royal Society of London and the Royal Academy of Sciences of Berlin. Cramer died on 4 January 1752 at Bagnols-sur-Cèze while traveling in southern France to restore his health.

Contributions to mathematics

In 1728, Cramer proposed a solution to the St. Petersburg Paradox that came very close to the concept of expected utility theory given ten years later by Daniel Bernoulli. He did extensive travel throughout Europe in the late 1730s, which greatly influenced his works in mathematics.

Cramer published his best-known work in his forties. This included his treatise on algebraic curves (1750). It contains the earliest demonstration that a curve of the n-th degree is determined by n(n + 3)/2 points on it, in general position (see Cramer's theorem (algebraic curves)). This led to the misconception that is Cramer's paradox, concerning the number of intersections of two curves compared to the number of points that determine a curve.

Cramer edited the works of the two elder Bernoullis, and wrote on the physical cause of the spheroidal shape of the planets and the motion of their apsides (1730), and on Newton's treatment of cubic curves (1746).

In 1750 he published Cramer's rule, giving a general formula for the solution for any unknown in a linear equation system having a unique solution, in terms of determinants implied by the system. This rule is still standard.

Selected works

Image:Cramer - Introduction a l'analyse des lignes courbes algebriques, 1750 - 1262149.jpg

  • Quelle est la cause de la figure elliptique des planètes et de la mobilité de leur aphélies?, Geneva, 1730
  • {{google books|HzcVAAAAQAAJ|Introduction à l'analyse des lignes courbes algébriques}}. Geneva: Frères Cramer & Cl. Philibert, 1750

See also

Notes

{{notes}}

References

{{reflist}}

  • "Gabriel Cramer", in [http://www.ville-ge.ch/mhs/pdf/expo_2012_rousseau_livret.pdf Rousseau et les savants genevois], p. 29 {{in lang|fr}}
  • W. W. Rouse Ball, A Short Account of the History of Mathematics, (4th Edition, 1908)
  • Isaac Benguigui, Gabriel Cramer : illustre mathématicien, 1704–1752, Genève, Cramer & Cie, 1998 {{in lang|fr}}
  • {{MacTutor|id=Cramer}}
  • {{in lang|de}} Johann Christoph Strodtmann, « [http://www.e-rara.ch/zut/content/pageview/3863508 Geschichte des Herrn Gabriel Cramer] », in Das neue gelehrte Europa […], 4th part, Meissner, 1754 Also digitized by e-rara.ch