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Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man of math - James Earle

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    This image of the Vitruvian Man,
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    taken from Leonardo's sketches,
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    has become one of the most recognizable
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    symbols of the Renaissance.
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    But why?
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    It's a simple pen and ink drawing, right?
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    Wrong!
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    Let's start to answer this question
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    with a math problem.
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    I know how to calculate the area of a circle.
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    I take the value for pi
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    and multiply it by the radius squared.
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    I also know how to take the area of a square.
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    I multiply the base by itself.
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    But how can I take the area of a circle
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    and create a square with an equal area?
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    This is a problem often called "squaring a circle"
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    that was first proposed in the ancient world.
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    And like many of ideas of the ancient world,
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    it was given new life during the Renaissance.
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    As it turns out,
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    this problem is impossible to solve
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    because of the nature of pi,
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    but that's another story.
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    Leonardo's sketch,
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    which is influenced by the writings
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    of the Roman architect, Vitruvius,
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    places a man firmly at the center
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    of a circle and a square.
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    Vitruvius claimed the navel
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    is the center of the human body
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    and that if one takes a compass
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    and places the fixed point on the navel,
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    a circle can be drawn perfectly around the body.
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    Additionally, Vitruvius recognized
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    that arm span and height
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    have a nearly perfect correspondence in the human body,
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    thus placing the body perfectly inside a square as well.
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    Leonardo used the ideas of Vitruvius
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    to solve the problem of squaring a circle metaphorically
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    using mankind as the area for both shapes.
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    Leonardo wasn't just thinking about Vitruvius, though.
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    There was an intellectual movement
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    in Italy at the time
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    called Neoplatonism.
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    This movement took an old concept
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    from the 4th century developed by Plato and Aristotle,
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    called "The Great Chain of Being".
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    This belief holds that the universe is a hierarchy
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    resembling a chain,
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    and that chain starts at the top with God,
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    then travels down through the angels,
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    planets,
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    stars,
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    and all lifeforms
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    before ending with demons and devils.
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    Early in this philosophic movement,
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    it was thought that mankind's place in this chain
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    was exactly in the center.
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    Because humans have a mortal body
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    accompanied by an immortal soul,
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    we divide the universe nicely in half.
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    Around the time Leonardo sketched
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    the Vitruvian Man, however,
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    a Neoplatonist named Pico della Mirandola
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    had a different idea.
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    He pried mankind off the chain
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    and claimed that humans have a unique ability
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    to take any position they want.
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    Pico claimed that God desired
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    a being capable of comprehending
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    the beautiful and complicated universe he had created.
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    This led to the creation of mankind,
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    which he placed at the center of the universe
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    with the ability to take whatever form he pleases.
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    Mankind, according to Pico,
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    could crawl down the chain and behave like an animal
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    or crawl up the chain and behave like a god,
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    it's our choice.
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    Looking back at the sketch,
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    we can see that by changing the position of the man,
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    he can fill the irreconcilable areas
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    of a circle and a square.
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    If geometry is the language the universe is written in,
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    then this sketch seems to say
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    we can exist within all its elements.
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    Mankind can fill whatever shape
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    he pleases geometrically
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    and philosophically as well.
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    In this one sketch,
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    Leondardo was able to combine
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    the mathematics,
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    religion,
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    philosophy,
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    architecture,
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    and artistic skill of his age.
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    No wonder it has become such an icon
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    for the entire time period.
Title:
Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man of math - James Earle
Speaker:
James Earle
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/da-vinci-s-vitruvian-man-of-math-james-earle

What's so special about Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man? With arms outstretched, the man fills the irreconcilable spaces of a circle and a square -- symbolizing the Renaissance-era belief in the mutable nature of humankind. James Earle explains the geometric, religious and philosophical significance of this deceptively simple drawing.

Lesson by James Earle, animation by TED-Ed.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:21

English subtitles

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