Little is known about Ptolemy's life and education, other that he lived
and worked in Alexandria, one of the primary centers of Greek culture
in late antiquity, and that he has no genealogical
relationship whatsoever to the Pharaoh dynasty bearing the same name
(as believed by many in medieval times). He wrote on many topics,
including geography, astrology, musical theory, optics, physics,
and of course astronomy. He died most probably between 141 and 151 AD.
His landmark astronomical work is his Mathematical compilation,
(or Syntaxis, as Prolemy himself referred to it)
better known under the name Amalgest, given to it by its later Arabic
translators and commentators. By making extensive use of the geometrical
constructions known as epicycles and equants,
Ptolemy constructed a mathematical
model of planetary motion that did far better at predicting
planetary positions than anything else produced in antiquity.
It is the fusion of
Ptolemy's model with the cosmology and physics of
Aristotle
that was to be adopted in the late antiquity and medieval Western world,
and literally define mankind's view of the universe for over a millennium.
Ptolemy was also an accomplished geographer. His maps of Asia and Africa
are said to have inspired Christopher Columbus, many centuries later,
in his westward expedition to India
across the Atlantic.
Bibliography:
Toomer, G.J. 1984 (ed. and trans.), Ptolemy's Amalgest, Springer,
Porter, R. (ed.) 1994, The biographical dictionary of scientists,
Oxford University Press.
Aristotle
Copernicus
Clavius
Kepler
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