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Born: 24 January 1798 in Imperial Free City of Rothenburg (now Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany)
Died: 1 June 1867 in Erlangen, Bavaria (now Germany)
Karl von Staudt's parents were Sabine Maria Albrecht (1770-1857) and Johann Christian von Staudt (1755-1828). Johann Christian studied at Göttingen returning to Rothenburg where he became the first city archivist. He married Sabine Albrecht in 1790 and their son Karl was born in 1798. The family, which contained two brothers older than Karl, lived in a home in the Herrengasse in Rothenburg. When Karl was four years old, in 1802, Rothenburg was annexed to Bavaria and this created a time of major upheaval. Johann Christian became the legal council for the city but major changes to the education system after the annexation saw the creation of the four-year Latin school in Rothenburg (now the Reichsstadt Gymnasium) which Karl attended. Completing his studies there in 1813, since there was no high school in Rothenburg for him to attend, he entered the famous Carolinum-Alexandrinum Gymnasium in Ansbach (now the Gymnasium Carolinum) in the autumn of 1813.
Up to this time von Staudt had no clear idea of the career he wanted to follow but his family expected him to follow one of the traditional family occupations of merchant or lawyer. However, at the Carolinum-Alexandrinum Gymnasium he was taught mathematics by Karl Heribert Ignatius Buzengeiger (1771-1835) and from this time on von Staudt knew that mathematics was the subject he loved. He completed his studies at the Gymnasium in 1817 but did not go to university immediately, remaining in Ansbach where he had private lesson from Buzengeiger. The best mathematician at this time was Carl Friedrich Gauss in Göttingen and Buzengeiger advised von Staudt that he should go there to Göttingen and study under Gauss. This was not a particularly easy thing for von Staudt to do since there were difficulties put in the way of anyone from Bavaria who wished to study in a university outside the Kingdom. Even von Staudt's father, who himself had studied at Göttingen, tried to persuade his son to attend one of the three Bavarian universities, Munich, Erlangen or Würzburg. Von Staudt, however, followed the advice of Buzengeiger and eventually overcoming the administrative problems, matriculated at the University of Göttingen, in the Kingdom of Hanover, on 3 May 1819.
He studied at the University of Göttingen for three years, attending many lecture courses by Gauss. Gauss was employed in Göttingen as the director of the university observatory so, to work closely with him, von Staudt became involved in work on astronomical calculations. This early research work was on determining the orbit of a comet but his interests at this time were also in geometry. Through Buzengeiger he had come to know Karl Feuerbach and in 1820 solved one of his problems by calculating the radius of the first "Feuerbach's circle". Despite completing some excellent work in Göttingen, von Staudt was eventually forced to leave the university and return to Bavaria due to family problems which required him to administer family estates. When he said his final farewell to Gauss, his teacher is reported to have said to him "Staudt, you can now learn nothing more from me". He now needed a university that would give him a degree and his first choice was the Julius-Maximilians University of Würzburg, the nearest university to his home town of Rothenburg. Professors Andreas Metz (1767-1839) and Johann Schön (1771-1839) at Würzburg were not prepared to award him a doctorate, however, for he had not studied enough philosophy to fulfil the regulations. Von Staudt then tried the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen where it appears that, based on the work he had done for Gauss together with Gauss's recommendation, he received a doctorate in 1822.
Von Staudt studied the state examinations to teach mathematics and science at a Gymnasium and on 24 October 1822 he began his teaching practice at the Würzburg Gymnasium. He took the state examinations to become a Gymnasium teacher at Munich in October 1824 and was employed as a teacher at the Würzburg Gymnasium. In September 1824 he was also appointed as a dozent at the Julius-Maximilians University of Würzburg although there was some opposition in the faculty since he did not have a philosophical training. Fortunately Prince Ludwig of Bavaria wanted to modernise the University of Würzburg so von Staudt's appointment was approved subject to the condition that he also remained as a teacher at the Würzburg Gymnasium. He had a reputation as an excellent teacher but having to lecture at the university and teach in the Gymnasium gave him an unacceptably high workload. He also seems to have been unhappy at the University and often quarrelled with other members of the faculty.
The Director of the Melanchthon-Gymnasium in Nürnberg was aware of von Staudt's fine reputation as a teacher so he offered him a position at his school. Unhappy with his situation in Würzburg, von Staudt accepted and began his teaching at the Melanchthon-Gymnasium on 25 October 1827. Although there was no university in Nürnberg, he was also appointed professor of mathematics at the Polytechnic School at Nürnberg. His lectures were well received and soon students were coming from the nearby University of Erlangen to listen to them. His reputation in astronomy was high, largely due to the high opinion that Gauss had of him, and Wilhelm Bessel offered him a position at the Albertus University of Königsberg in 1829. Von Staudt, however, did not wish to leave Bavaria so did not accept Bessel's offer.
On 28 October 1832 von Staudt married Jeanette Drechsler (1809-1848), the daughter of Ernst Konrad Drechsler who was a judge. This very happy marriage produced two children Eduard (1833-1899) and Mathhilde (1835-1885). Von Staudt was appointed to the chair of mathematics at the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen on 23 August 1835 and took up the position on 1 October. He held the chair in Erlangen for the rest of his life serving as Dean of the Faculty of Arts on two separate occasions, 1849-50 and 1855-56.
In 1825 von Staudt showed how to construct a regular inscribed polygon of 17 sides using only compasses. He turned to Bernoulli numbers and in De numeris Bernoullianis (1845) gave not only a proof of the von Staudt-Clausen theorem but also provided new significant results about properties of the numerators of Bernoulli numbers, given in form of congruences. An important work on projective geometry, Geometrie der Lage was published in 1847. It was the first work to completely free projective geometry from any metrical basis. Another of his publications on projective geometry was Beiträge zur Geometrie der Lage(1856-60). Julian Coolidge explains in [7] what led von Staudt to undertake this major work:-
This deep thinker perceived two essential weaknesses in the synthetic geometry of his predecessors.
(a) The basis of projective relations was the cross ratio. This is projectively invariant but, as previously given, was based on distances and angles which are not in themselves unalterable.
(b) What are imaginary points anyway? What can be said about them, except that they are imaginary?
He developed geometry so as to meet these difficulties. Karin Reich writes about Geometrie der Lage in [18]:-
In this book Staudt tries to 'purify' the principles of projective geometry by removing all metrical notions. Thereby he also raised synthetic geometry to a new level. He laid emphasis on involution, with his influential quadrilateral construction. Together with Poncelet, Gergonne and Steiner, he belongs to the founders of projective and synthetic geometry.
Gaston Darboux writes [8]:-
... von Staudt endeavoured to construct a geometry free from all metrical relations, and exclusively based upon relations of situation. It is in this spirit that his first work, the 'Geometrie der Lage' (1847) was conceived. The author takes as his point of departure the harmonic properties of the complete quadrilateral and those of homologous triangles, proved solely by considerations of geometry of three dimensions, analogous to those of which the school of Monge has made so frequent a use. In the first part of his work, von Staudt entirely omitted imaginary relations. It is only in his 'Beiträge', his second work, that, by a very original extension of Chasles's method, he geometrically defined an isolated, imaginary element and distinguished it from its conjugate. This extension, although rigorous, is laborious and very abstract. ... By purely projective methods, von Staudt established a complete method for calculating the anharmonic ratios of the most general imaginary elements. ... the ingenuity which he displayed in arriving at his conclusions must be admired.
Gian-Carlo Rota writes about Staudt's proof of the equivalence of synthetic and analytic projective geometry [19]:-
No significant progress has been made in simplifying von Staudt's proof. Even today, a full proof of von Staudt's theorem takes no less than twenty pages, including a number of unspeakably dull lemmas. Every geometer is dimly aware of the equivalence of synthetic and analytic projective geometry; however, few geometers have ever bothered to look up the proof, let alone to remember it. Garrett Birkhoff, in his treatise on lattice theory, a book purporting to deal precisely with this and related topics, gives the statement of von Staudt's theorem, and then gingerly refers the reader to a proof by Emil Artin that was privately distributed in mimeographed form in the thirties at the University of Notre Dame. Von Staudt's theorem was so far removed from the mathematical mainstream, that in the thirties von Neumann rediscovered it from scratch, with much the same proof as von Staudt's, while developing his theory of continuous geometries (I have been told by Stan Ulam that von Neumann, upon learning of von Staudt's work done almost a century before him, fell into a fit of depression).
Robin Hartshorne explains how von Staudt's contributions came to be fully appreciated [13]:-
It seems clear that von Staudt's work was not understood or appreciated when it first appeared. Max Noether, in his memorial on von Staudt ([3]), says that at the time of publication of the third part of the 'Beiträge' in 1860, which coincided with the 25th anniversary of von Staudt's professorship in Erlangen, his colleagues could not appreciate the value of his path-breaking work, but respected the professor who continued his own rigorous solitary research. Theodor Reye, whose lectures on von Staudt's approach to projective geometry were first published in 1866, says in his preface that the austere language, the extreme abstractness of presentation, and the lack of diagrams have hindered the well-deserved recognition of von Staudt's work. Perhaps Reye's lectures began to reawaken interest in von Staudt. But it seems to me that it was probably Felix Klein, with his interest in the foundations of geometry and the so-called non-Euclidean geometries, who focused attention again on von Staudt. Klein in 1873 claimed there was a gap in von Staudt's proof of a key result (what we now call the Fundamental Theorem of Projective Geometry), which could only be filled by an axiom of continuity. Klein's article drew responses from Cantor, Lüroth, and Zeuthen, which Klein describes in a subsequent article of 1874. This discussion of the fundamental theorem also helped crystallize concepts of continuity, which had only been handled in a confused manner earlier. Reye, in the preface to the second edition of his lectures in 1877, mentions Klein's objections and says that because of these he has substituted a new proof of the fundamental theorem due to Thomae. Max Noether (see [3]) says that even von Staudt himself did not realise the implications of his work, that it was possible to construct the metric from purely projective-geometric data. It remained for later generations to appreciate the impact of von Staudt's work on the foundations of projective geometry.
Dirk Struik writes about a lecture Hans Freudenthal gave in Erlangen on 20 June 1967 on the occasion of the centenary of von Staudt's death (see [10]). Struik explains that in the lecture Freudenthal:-
... looks, with modern eyes, at von Staudt's aim to found projective geometry independently of any metric assumptions, an approach closely approximating modern axiomatic form. The conclusion is that von Staudt was the first to raise the question of foundations looking for purity of method in projective geometry, using his definition of projectivities by the invariance of harmonicity. This and his definition of complex imaginary points by involution on oriented lines are "almost anachronistic examples" of bold abstraction. By his calculus of 'throws' he gave an outline of the modern algebraisation of axiomatic theory.
Von Staudt also gave a nice geometric solution to quadratic equations. We are given the quadratic equation x2 - gx + h = 0 which we wish to solve geometrically. On the Cartesian plane, plot the points ( h/g, 0) and ( 4/g, 2), and let the line joining these two points cut the unit circle with centre (0, 1) in points A andB. Project A and B from the point (0, 2) onto the x-axis at the points (a, 0) and (b, 0), say. Then a and b are the roots of the given quadratic equation. It is an interesting exercise for the reader to prove this geometrical method - try it.
In 1863, von Staudt was elected a corresponding member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. In 1867 he was proposed for full membership of the Academy but he died of a lung disease before the membership was confirmed.
An obituary in the Augsburg Allgemeine Zeitung gives this tribute to von Staudt:-
But to all who knew him closely he leaves behind the image of a man hardened by continued mental work of a scientific character, a man striving tirelessly to move ahead yet having deep respect for the status quo, having devotion to duty, a sense of right and strict with himself, having joy in social interactions, giving kindness to others and modestly performing kind deeds.
Books:
Articles:
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علامات بسيطة في جسدك قد تنذر بمرض "قاتل"
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أول صور ثلاثية الأبعاد للغدة الزعترية البشرية
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مكتبة أمّ البنين النسويّة تصدر العدد 212 من مجلّة رياض الزهراء (عليها السلام)
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