John Wallis
John Wallis (November 22, 1616 - October 28, 1703) was an English mathematician who is given partial credit for the development of modern calculus. He is also credited with introducing the infinity symbol, ∞.
John Wallis was born at Ashford, Kent. He was educated at Felstead school, and at the age of fifteen mastered arithmetic after becoming fascinated by his brother's book on the topic. As it was intended that he should be a doctor, he was sent to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, while there he kept an act on the doctrine of the circulation of the blood; that was said to have been the first occasion in Europe on which this theory was publicly maintained in a disputation. His interests, however, centred on mathematics.
He was elected to a fellowship at Queens' College, Cambridge, and subsequently took orders, but on the whole adhered to the Puritan party, to whom he rendered great assistance in deciphering the royalist despatches. He, however, joined the moderate Presbyterians in signing the remonstrance against the execution of Charles I, by which he incurred the lasting hostility of the Independents. In spite of their opposition he was appointed in 1649 to the Savilian chair of geometry at Oxford University, where he lived until his death on October 28, 1703. Besides his mathematical works he wrote on theology, logic, and philosophy, and was the first to devise a system for teaching deaf-mutes.
In 1655 Wallis published a treatise on conic sections in which they were defined analytically. The GÃÂéomÃÂétrie of Descartes is both difficult and obscure, and to many of his contemporaries, to whom the method was new, it must have been incomprehensible. This work did something to make the method intelligible to all mathematicians: it is the earliest book in which these curves are considered and defined as curves of the second degree.
The most important of Wallis's works was his Arithmetica Infinitorum, which was published in 1656. In this treatise the methods of analysis of Descartes and Cavalieri were systematised and greatly extended, but their logical exposition is open to criticism. It is prefaced by a short tract on conic sections. He commences by proving the law of indices; shows that represents ; that represents the square root of x, that represents the cube root of , and generally that represents the reciprocal of , and that represents the qth root of .
Leaving the numerous algebraic applications of this discovery he next proceeds to find, by the method of indivisibles, the area enclosed between the curve , the axis of x, and any ordinate x = h; and he proves that the ratio of this area to that of the parallelogram on the same base and of the same altitude is equal to the ratio 1 : m + 1. He apparently assumed that the same result would be true also for the curve y = a xm, where a is any constant, and m any number positive or negative; but he only discusses the case of the parabola in which m = 2, and that of the hyperbola in which m = -1: in the latter case his interpretation of the result is incorrect. He then shows that similar results might be written down for any curve of the form ; and hence that, if the ordinate y of a curve can be expanded in powers of x, its area can be determined: thus he says that if the equation of the curve were , its area would be . He then applies this to the quadrature of the curves ,, , etc. taken between the limits x = 0 and x = 1; and shows that the areas are respectively 1, 1/6, 1/30, 1/140, etc. He next considers curves of the form and establishes the theorem that the area bounded by the curve, the axis of x, and the ordinate x = 1, is to the area of the rectangle on the same base and of the same altitude as m : m + 1. This is equivalent to finding the value of . He illustrates this by the parabola in which m = 2. He states, but does not prove, the corresponding result for a curve of the form