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Ralph Waldo Emerson

We do not listen with the best regard to the verses of a man who is only a poet, nor to his problems if he is only an algebraist; but if a man is at once acquainted with the geometric foundation of things and with their festal splendor, his poetry is exact and his arithmetic musical.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Loci: Convergence

Benjamin Banneker's Trigonometry Puzzle

by Florence Fasanelli, Graham Jagger, Bea Lumpkin

  

 

The mathematical puzzles of Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806) have been of interest since he first produced them in the last half of the 18th century and the early years of the 19th.  By the age of 21, he was a hero in the territory of Maryland.1  Banneker began his life-changing studies of astronomy and mathematics about 1788, the year Maryland joined the Union, when he was lent some books by his friend the surveyor, George Ellicott.  Three of these are known:  Charles Leadbetter's Astronomy: Or the True System of the Planets Demonstrated (1727); James Ferguson's Astronomy Explained Upon Sir Isaac Newton's Principles, and Made Easy to Those Who Have Not Studied Mathematics(1761), and a book (in Latin) which Ellicott gave his bride as a wedding present.

In one of the puzzles, “Trigonometry,” Banneker demonstrates his knowledge of logarithms as he presents his solution.  The question arises as to what book of logarithmic tables could Banneker have been using.  The trigonometry page is reproduced here by permission of The Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, Maryland, where Banneker’s Astronomical Journal 1798, is kept (less than 10 miles from where it was written).

 

            This puzzle also demonstrates Banneker’s humor, for after he gives a generalization of his plan, he creates a specific problem, solves it using logarithms, and sums it all up by implying it could have been done far more simply.  He provides us with a neat lesson on reflecting back upon solutions.

 

 

 


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