List of examples of Stigler's law

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{{More citations needed|date=February 2009}}

Stigler's law concerns the supposed tendency of eponymous expressions for scientific discoveries to honor people other than their respective originators.

Examples include:

{{Incomplete list|date=February 2011}}

{{Compact ToC|seealso=yes|refs=yes}}

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B

{{cite encyclopedia |title=Kelly, William |volume=6 |pages=791 |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |year=2005}}

  • The Bethe–Salpeter equation (named after Hans Bethe and Edwin Salpeter),{{cite journal |author=H. Bethe, E. Salpeter |year=1951 |title=A Relativistic Equation for Bound-State Problems |journal=Physical Review |volume=84 |issue= 6 |page=1232 |doi=10.1103/PhysRev.84.1232 |bibcode = 1951PhRv...84.1232S }} which describes the bound states of a two-body system in quantum field theoretical. The equation was first published by Yoichiro Nambu, but without derivation.{{cite journal |author=Y. Nambu |year=1950 |title=Force Potentials in Quantum Field Theory |journal=Progress of Theoretical Physics |volume=5 |issue= 4 |page=614 |doi=10.1143/PTP.5.614 |doi-access=free }}
  • Betteridge's law of headlines, stating that when a headline asks a (yes-no) question, the answer is no. Considered "an old truism among journalists", it was well known before Betteridge wrote about it in 2009.
  • Betz' law, which shows the maximum attainable energy efficiency of a wind turbine, was discovered first by Frederick W. Lanchester. It was subsequently independently rediscovered by Albert Betz and also Nikolai Zhukovsky.
  • The Bilinski dodecahedron appears in a 1752 book by John Lodge Cowley but is named after Stanko Bilinski, who rediscovered it in 1960.
  • The Black–Scholes model postulating a geometric Brownian motion as a model for stock market returns, credited to the 1973 academic papers of Fischer Black, Myron Scholes and Robert C. Merton, was first proposed by Paul Samuelson in 1965, and refined further in work with Merton in 1969.{{Cite journal |last=Samuelson |first=Paul A. |last2=Merton |first2=Robert C. |date=1969 |title=A Complete Model of Warrant Pricing that Maximizes Utility |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1302963478?sourcetype=Scholarly%20Journals |journal=Industrial Management Review |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=17-46 |via=ProQuest}}
  • Blount's disease was described independently by C. Mau (1923) and Harald Nilsonne (1929), both writing in German, before it was described in English by Walter Putnam Blount (1937).
  • Bode's law of 1772, stating that the distances of the planets from the sun follow a simple arithmetical rule, was first stated by Johann Titius in 1766, not Johann Elert Bode.
  • The Bonferroni correction is named after Italian mathematician Carlo Emilio Bonferroni for its use of Bonferroni inequalities.Bonferroni, C. E., Teoria statistica delle classi e calcolo delle probabilità, Pubblicazioni del R Istituto Superiore di Scienze Economiche e Commerciali di Firenze 1936 However, its development is often credited to Olive Jean Dunn, who described the procedure's application to confidence intervals.{{cite journal |first=Olive Jean |last=Dunn |title=Estimation of the Means for Dependent Variables |journal=Annals of Mathematical Statistics |volume=29 |issue=4 |pages=1095–1111 |year=1958 |jstor=2237135 |doi=10.1214/aoms/1177706374|doi-access=free }}{{cite journal |first=Olive Jean |last=Dunn |title=Multiple Comparisons Among Means |journal=Journal of the American Statistical Association |volume=56 |issue=293 |pages=52–64 |year=1961 |url=http://sci2s.ugr.es/keel/pdf/algorithm/articulo/1961-Bonferroni_Dunn-JASA.pdf |doi=10.1080/01621459.1961.10482090 |citeseerx=10.1.1.309.1277 }}
  • Boyce–Codd normal form, a normal form used in database normalization. The definition of what we now know as BCNF appeared in a paper by Ian Heath in 1971.Heath, I. "Unacceptable File Operations in a Relational Database." Proc. 1971 ACM SIGFIDET Workshop on Data Description, Access, and Control, San Diego, California (November 11–12, 1971). Date writes:
    Since that definition predated Boyce and Codd's own definition by some three years, it seems to me that BCNF ought by rights to be called Heath normal form. But it isn't.Date, C.J. Database in Depth: Relational Theory for Practitioners. O'Reilly (2005), p. 142.
  • Boyle's law, which stipulates the reciprocal relation between the pressure and the volume of a gas, was first noted by Richard Towneley and Henry Power. In France, the law is known as Mariotte's law, after Edme Mariotte, who published his results later than Boyle, but crucially added that the relation holds only when temperature is kept constant.
  • Bradley–Terry model, one of the most popular models for Pairwise comparison, first described by Ernst Zermelo in 1929.
  • Brayton Cycle, as quoted from Wikipedia itself: The engine cycle is named after George Brayton (1830–1892), the American engineer who developed it originally for use in piston engines, although it was originally proposed and patented by Englishman John Barber in 1791.
  • Brus equation named after Louis E. Brus. Proposed a few years earlier by Alexander Efros.
  • Burnside's lemma, a counting technique in group theory, was discovered by Augustin Louis Cauchy, or possibly others. William Burnside originally attributed it to Ferdinand Georg Frobenius. Ironically, Burnside made many original contributions to group theory, and Burnside's Lemma is sometimes jokingly referred to as "the lemma that is not Burnside's".
  • Buridan's ass originates from the Persian philosopher Al-Ghazali. The version popularised by Jean Buridan also does not include the eponymous donkey.

C

  • Cantor–Bernstein–Schröder theorem (also known by other variations, such as Schröder-Bernstein theorem) first proved by Richard Dedekind
  • Cantor set, discovered in 1874 by Henry John Stephen Smith and introduced by German mathematician Georg Cantor 1883.
  • Carmichael number: Václav Šimerka listed the first seven Carmichael numbers in 1885; they are named after Robert Daniel Carmichael who subsequently discovered the first one in 1910.{{cite journal |last1=Lemmermeyer |first1=F. |title=Václav Šimerka: quadratic forms and factorization |journal=LMS Journal of Computation and Mathematics |date=2013 |volume=16 |pages=118–129 |doi=10.1112/S1461157013000065 |doi-access=free}}
  • Cartan matrices, first investigated by Wilhelm Killing.
  • Cardano's formula, the solution to general cubic equations. Cardano stated that it was discovered by Scipione del Ferro, who passed the knowledge to his student Antonio Maria Fior. Around 1535 Niccolò Fontana Tartaglia learned of this from Fior and re-derived the formula for the cubic, which he later shared with Cardano.{{Cite web | url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Scipione-Ferro | title=Scipione Ferro | Italian mathematician| date=22 April 2024}}J. Stillwell, Mathematics and Its History, 3rd Ed, Springer,2010
  • Cassegrain reflector, named after a design published in 1672 which has been attributed to Laurent Cassegrain,[http://www.ingenta.com/isis/searching/Expand/ingenta?pub=infobike://iop/jopt/1997/00000028/00000004/art00004 André Baranne and Françoise Launay, Cassegrain: a famous unknown of instrumental astronomy], Journal of Optics, 1997, vol. 28, no. 4, pp. 158-172(15) but was already known to Bonaventura Cavalieri in 1632Stargazer, the Life and Times of the Telescope, by Fred Watson, [https://books.google.com/books?id=2LZZginzib4C&pg=PA134&dq=gregy+cassegrain+mersenne p. 134] and Marin Mersenne in 1636.Stargazer, [https://books.google.com/books?id=2LZZginzib4C&pg=PA115&dq=mersenne+zucchi+parallel#PPA115,M1 p. 115].
  • Cartesian duality: Named for René Descartes, but Teresa of Avila and her contemporaries wrote about similar methods of philosophical exploration eight to ten years before Descartes was born.{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/25/opinion/descartes-is-not-our-father.html|title=Opinion | Descartes is Not Our Father|newspaper=The New York Times|date=25 September 2017|last1=Mercer|first1=Christia}}
  • Cavendish balance for measuring the universal gravitational constant, first devised and constructed by John Michell.
  • The Cayley-Hamilton theorem was proven for the general case by Ferdinand Frobenius.
  • Chandrasekhar limit, the mass upper limit of a white dwarf, was first derived by Wilhelm Anderson and E. C. Stoner, and later improved by Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.
  • Chebyshev's inequality guarantees that, for a wide class of probability distributions, no more than a certain fraction of values can be more than a certain distance from the mean. It was first formulated by his friend and colleague Irénée-Jules Bienaymé in 1853 and proved by Chebyshev in 1867.
  • Chernoff bound, a bound on the tail distribution of sums of independent random variables, named for Herman Chernoff but due to Herman Rubin.{{cite book |url=http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781482204964 |title=Past, Present, and Future of Statistics |chapter=A career in statistics |page=35 |publisher=CRC Press |last1=Chernoff |first1=Herman |editor-first1=Xihong |editor-last1=Lin |editor-first2=Christian |editor-last2=Genest |editor-first3=David L. |editor-last3=Banks |editor-first4=Geert |editor-last4=Molenberghs |editor-first5=David W. |editor-last5=Scott |editor-first6=Jane-Ling |editor-last6=Wang |editor6-link= Jane-Ling Wang |year=2014 |isbn=9781482204964 |chapter-url=http://nisla05.niss.org/copss/past-present-future-copss.pdf}}
  • Cobb–Douglas, a production function named after Paul H. Douglas and Charles W Cobb, developed earlier by Philip Wicksteed.
  • Cooley–Tukey algorithm, named after J. W. Cooley and John Tukey, but invented 160 years earlier in 1805 by Carl Friedrich Gauss.
  • Curie point, a critical temperature of phase change in ferromagnetism, named for Pierre Curie, who reported it in his thesis in 1895, but the phenomenon was found by Claude Pouillet before 1832.{{cite book|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UfvxyLIMalgC&pg=PA6 |title=The Random-Cluster Model |journal=The Random‑Cluster Model |volume=333 |year=2006 |page=6 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160213172004/http://statslab.cam.ac.uk/~grg/books/rcm1-1.pdf |archive-date=2016-02-13 |url-status=live |first=Geoffrey |last=Grimmett |chapter=Random-Cluster Measures |author-link=Geoffrey Grimmett |publisher=Springer |series=Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften |doi=10.1007/978-3-540-32891-9_1 |isbn=978-3-540-32891-9 |issn=0072-7830 |lccn=2006925087 |oclc=262691034 |ol=4105561W |quote=There is a critical temperature for this phenomenon, often called the Curie point after Pierre Curie, who reported this discovery in his 1895 thesis ... In an example of Stigler’s Law ... the existence of such a temperature was discovered before 1832 by {{bracket|Claude}} Pouillet.... }}
  • Currying, a technique for transforming an n-arity function to a chain of functions. Named after Haskell Curry who had attributed its earlier discovery to Moses Schönfinkel, though the principle can be traced back to work in 1893 by Gottlob Frege.

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  • Newton's first and second laws of mechanics were known and proposed in separate ways by Galileo, Hooke and Huygens before Newton did in his Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Newton owns the discovery of only the third one.Cf. Clifford A. Pickover, De Arquímides a Hawking,p. 137
  • Norman's law, proposed by Donald Norman, is a general restatement of Stigler's Law, "No saying or pronouncement is named after its originator." This law was named for Norman as an example of Stigler's Law – which was, itself, not named after its originator.PhD-Design Discussion List, 7 January 2013, https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A2=ind1301&L=phd-design&D=0&P=11022
  • Norton's theorem was published in November 1926 by Hans Ferdinand Mayer and independently discovered by Edward Lawry Norton who presented it in an internal Bell Labs technical report, dated November 1926.
  • Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem. The name Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem honours Harry Nyquist and Claude Shannon, but the theorem was also previously discovered by E. T. Whittaker (published in 1915) and Shannon cited Whittaker's paper in his work. (from Wikipedia)

O

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R

  • The Reynolds number in fluid mechanics was introduced by George Stokes, but is named after Osborne Reynolds, who popularized its use.
  • Richards equation is attributed to Richards in his 1931 publication, but was earlier introduced by Richardson in 1922 in his book "Weather prediction by numerical process." (Cambridge University press. p. 262) as pointed out by John Knight and Peter Raats in "The contributions of Lewis Fry Richardson to drainage theory, soil physics, and the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum" EGU General Assembly 2016.
  • Russell's paradox is a paradox in set theory that Bertrand Russell discovered and published in 1901. However, Ernst Zermelo had independently discovered the paradox in 1899.

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  • Zipf's law states that given some corpus of natural language utterances, the frequency of any word is inversely proportional to its rank in the frequency table. The law is named after George Kingsley Zipf, an early twentieth century American linguist. Zipf popularized Zipf's law and sought to explain it, though he did not claim to have originated it.{{cite journal |last=Powers |first=David M W |url=http://aclweb.org/anthology/W98-1218 |title=Applications and explanations of Zipf's law |year=1998 |location=Joint conference on new methods in language processing and computational natural language learning |pages=151–160 |publisher=Association for Computational Linguistics}} Jean-Baptiste Estoup was the first person to note this regularity in word frequencies.

See also

References

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