Showing posts with label Theodoric of Freiberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theodoric of Freiberg. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2018

A brief biography of Theodoric of Freiberg

Theodoric of Freiberg (c. 1250 – c. 1310) was born in Freiberg in Saxony around the year 1250. He is sometimes referred to as “Dietrich of Saxony,” and often as “Theodoricus Teutonicus.

He studied at the University of Paris, gaining a Master of Theology. He joined the Dominican order at a young age. Dietrich was a prolific writer. His writings include compositions on nearly every branch of theology, philosophy, and natural science known to his period.

In his treatise De iride et de radialibus impressionibus, Theodoric gave an interpretation of the rainbow as a result of refraction of light in its spectrum of colours, even though he was not actually a scientist, nor in particular an experimentalist, and as a consequence he did not master the experimental method; nevertheless, he showed an attitude to research with a properly scientific object.

Both Theodoric and Descartes showed that the rainbow is made up of rays that enter a droplet and are reflected once from the inner surface. Theodoric of Freiberg also wrote works on theology, philosophy, optics, and astronomy.
A brief biography of Theodoric of Freiberg

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Theodoric of Freiberg on rainbow phenomenon

The rainbow is a bridge between the two cultures: poets and scientists alike have long been challenged to describe it. The ancient Greek philosophers tried to describe the rainbow, and Aristotle was the first to fully include it among the phenomena studied by physicists.

He proposed that the rainbow is actually an unusual kind of reflection of sunlight from clouds. The light is reflected at a fixed angle. giving rise to a circular cone of "rainbow rays. " Aristotle thus explained correctly the circular shape of the bow and perceived that it is not a material object with a definite location in the sky but rather a set of directions along which light is strongly scattered into the eyes of the observer.

Al-Hazen suggested that, in order to be able to form a rainbow, sunlight had to be reflected by clouds before reaching human eyes. Thus the water drops composing the clouds reflect the light ray and create the rainbow’s colours through a refraction and two or more reflections, like an image forming in a reflecting, smooth, concave, spherical mirror consisting of dense, wet air.

In 1304, Theodoric of Freiberg, the German monk, suggested that the rainbow phenomenon is due to sunlight being reflected through water drops suspended in mid-air.

He suggested instead that each drop is individually capable of producing a rainbow. Moreover, he tested this conjecture in experiments with a magnified raindrop: a spherical flask filled with water. He was able to trace the path followed by the light rays that make up the rainbow.

In 1604, Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) followed up on the studies by Polish monk, mathematician, physicist, philosopher and theologian Witelo, but he was unable to establish the law of refraction.

The first theoretical descriptions of rainbows were those by RenĂ© Descartes (who used ray tracing) and Baruch Spinoza (who used Cartesian analytical geometry), both in the 1620s. Around 1666, Isaac Newton improved upon Spinoza’s calculation, using calculus and analytical geometry, and verified the calculations with the most accurate measurements up to that time.
Theodoric of Freiberg on rainbow phenomenon

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