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Authors: E.T. Bell

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In this ability to forget himself in the world of his own thoughts
Gauss resembles both Archimedes and Newton. In two further respects he also measures up to them, his gifts for precise observation and a scientific inventiveness which enabled him to devise the instruments necessary for his scientific researches. To Gauss geodesy owes the invention of the heliotrope, an ingenious device by which signals could be transmitted practically instantaneously by means of reflected light. For its time the heliotrope was a long step forward. The astronomical instruments he used also received notable improvements at Gauss' hands. For use in his fundamental researches in electromagnetism Gauss invented the bifilar magnetometer. And as a final example of his mechanical ingenuity it may be recalled that Gauss in 1833 invented the electric telegraph and that he and his fellow worker Wilhelm Weber (1804-1891) used it as a matter of course in sending messages. The combination of mathematical genius with first-rate experimental ability is one of the rarest in all science.

Gauss himself cared but little for the possible practical uses of his inventions. Like Archimedes he preferred mathematics to all the kingdoms of the earth; others might gather the tangible fruits of his labors. But Weber, his collaborator in electromagnetic researches, saw clearly what the puny little telegraph of Göttingen meant for civilization. The railway, we recall, was just coming into its own in the early 1830's. “When the globe is covered with a net of railroads and telegraph wires,” Weber prophesied in 1835, “this net will render services comparable to those of the nervous system in the human body, partly as a means of transport, partly as a means for the propagation of ideas and sensations with the speed of lightning.”

The admiration of Gauss for Newton has already been noted. Knowing the tremendous efforts some of his own masterpieces had cost him, Gauss had a true appreciation of the long preparation and incessant meditation that went into Newton's greatest work. The story of Newton and the falling apple roused Gauss' indignation. “Silly!” he exclaimed. “Believe the story if you like, but the truth of the matter is this. A stupid, officious man asked Newton how he discovered the law of gravitation. Seeing that he had to deal with a child in intellect, and wanting to get rid of the bore, Newton answered that an apple fell and hit him on the nose. The man went away fully satisfied and completely enlightened.”

The apple story has its echo in our own times. When teased as to what led him to his theory of the gravitational field Einstein replied
that he asked a workman who had fallen off a building, to land unhurt on a pile of straw, whether he noticed the tug of the “force” of gravity on the way down. On being told that no force had tugged, Einstein immediately saw that “gravitation” in a sufficiently small region of space-time can be replaced by an acceleration of the observer's (the falling workman's) reference system. This story, if true, is also probably all rot. What gave Einstein his idea was the hard labor he expended for several years mastering the tensor calculus of two Italian mathematicians, Ricci and Levi-Civita, themselves disciples of Riemann and Christoffel, both of whom in their turn had been inspired by the geometrical work of Gauss.

Commenting on Archimedes, for whom he also had a boundless admiration, Gauss remarked that he could not understand how Archimedes failed to invent the decimal system of numeration or its equivalent (with some base other than 10). The thoroughly un-Greek work of Archimedes in devising a scheme for writing and dealing with numbers far beyond the capacity of the Greek symbolism had—according to Gauss—put the decimal notation with its all-important principle of place-value (325 = 3 × 10
2
+ 2 × 10 + 5) in Archimedes' hands. This oversight Gauss regarded as the greatest calamity in the history of science. “To what heights would science now be raised if Archimedes had made that discovery!” he exclaimed, thinking of his own masses of arithmetical and astronomical calculations which would have been impossible, even to him, without the decimal notation. Having a full appreciation of the significance for all science of improved methods of computation, Gauss slaved over his own calculations till pages of figures were reduced to a few lines which could be taken in almost at a glance. He himself did much of his calculating mentally; the improvements were intended for those less gifted than himself.

Unlike Newton in his later years, Gauss was never attracted by the rewards of public office, although his keen interest and sagacity in all matters pertaining to the sciences of statistics, insurance, and “political arithmetic” would have made him a good minister of finance. Till his last illness he found complete satisfaction in his science and his simple recreations. Wide reading in the literatures of Europe and the classics of antiquity, a critical interest in world politics, and the mastery of foreign languages and new sciences (including botany and mineralogy) were his hobbies.

English literature especially attracted him, although its darker aspect as in Shakespeare's tragedies was too much for the great mathematician's acute sensitiveness to all forms of suffering, and he tried to pick his way through the happier masterpieces. The novels of Sir Walter Scott (who was a contemporary of Gauss) were read eagerly as they came out, but the unhappy ending of
Kenilworth
made Gauss wretched for days and he regretted having read the story. One slip of Sir Walter's tickled the mathematical astronomer into delighted laughter, “the moon rises broad in the northwest,” and he went about for days correcting all the copies he could find. Historical works in English, particularly Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
and Macaulay's
History of England
gave him special pleasure.

For his meteoric young contemporary Lord Byron, Gauss had almost an aversion. Byron's posturing, his reiterated world-weariness, his affected misanthropy, and his romantic good looks had captivated the sentimental Germans even more completely than they did the stolid British who—at least the older males—thought Byron somewhat of a silly ass. Gauss saw through Byron's histrionics and disliked him. No man who guzzled good brandy and pretty women as assiduously as Byron did could be so very weary of the world as the naughty young poet with the flashing eye and the shaking hand pretended to be.

In the literature of his own country Gauss' tastes were somewhat unusual for an intellectual German. Jean Paul was his favorite German poet; Goethe and Schiller, whose lives partly overlapped his own, he did not esteem very highly. Goethe, he said, was unsatisfying. Being completely at variance with Schiller's philosophical tenets, Gauss disliked his poetry. He called
Resignation
a blasphemous, corrupt poem and wrote “Mephistopheles!” on the margin of his copy.

The facility with which he mastered languages in his youth stayed with Gauss all his life. Languages were rather more to him than a hobby. To test the plasticity of his mind as he grew older he would deliberately acquire a new language. The exercise, he believed, helped to keep his mind young. At the age of sixty two he began an intensive study of Russian without assistance from anyone. Within two years he was reading Russian prose and poetical works fluently, and carrying on his correspondence with scientific friends in St. Petersburg wholly in Russian. In the opinion of Russians who visited him in Göttingen he also spoke the language perfectly. Russian literature
he put on a par with English for the pleasure it gave him. He also tried Sanskrit but disliked it.

His third hobby, world politics, absorbed an hour or so of his time every day. Visiting the literary museum regularly, he kept abreast of events by reading all the newspapers to which the museum subscribed, from the London
Times
to the Göttingen local news.

In politics the intellectual aristocrat Gauss was conservative through and through, but in no sense reactionary. His times were turbulent, both in his own country and abroad. Mob rule and acts of political violence roused in him—as his friend Von Waltershausen reports—“an indescribable horror.” The Paris revolt of
1848
filled him with dismay.

The son of poor parents himself, familiar from infancy with the intelligence and morality of “the masses,” Gauss remembered what he had observed, and his opinion of the intelligence, morality, and political acumen of “the people”—taken in the mass, as demagogues find and take them—was extremely low. “
Mundus vult decepi”
he believed a true saying.

This disbelief in the innate morality, integrity, and intelligence of Rousseau's “natural man” when massed into a mob or when deliberating in cabinets, parliaments, congresses, and senates, was no doubt partly inspired by Gauss' intimate knowledge, as a man of science, of what “the natural man” did to the scientists of France in the early days of the French Revolution. It may be true, as the revolutionists declared, that “the people have no need of science,” but such a declaration to a man of Gauss' temperament was a challenge. Accepting the challenge, Gauss in his turn expressed his acid contempt for all “leaders of the people” who lead the people into turmoil for their own profit. As he aged he saw peace and simple contentment as the only good things in any country. Should civil war break out in Germany, he said, he would as soon be dead. Foreign conquest in the grand Napoleonic manner he looked upon as an incomprehensible madness.

These conservative sentiments were not the nostalgia of a reactionary who bids the world defy the laws of celestial mechanics and stand still in the heavens of a dead and unchanging past. Gauss believed in reforms—when they were intelligent. And if brains are not to judge when reforms are intelligent and when they are not, what organ of the human body is? Gauss had brains enough to see where the ambitions
of some of the great statesmen of his own reforming generation were taking Europe. The spectacle did not inspire his confidence.

His more progressive friends ascribed Gauss' conservatism to the closeness with which he stuck to his work. This may have had something to do with it. For the last twenty seven years of his life Gauss slept away from his observatory only once, when he attended a scientific meeting in Berlin to please Alexander von Humboldt who wished to show him off. But a man does not always have to be flying about all over the map to see what is going on. Brains and the ability to read newspapers (even when they lie) and government reports (especially when they lie) are sometimes better than any amount of sightseeing and hotel lobby gossip. Gauss stayed at home, read, disbelieved most of what he read, thought, and arrived at the truth.

Another source of Gauss' strength was his scientific serenity and his freedom from personal ambition. All his ambition was for the advancement of mathematics. When rivals doubted his assertion that he had anticipated them—not stated boastfully, but as a fact germane to the matter in hand—Gauss did not exhibit his diary to prove his priority but let his statement stand on its own merits.

Legendre was the most outspoken of these doubters. One experience made him Gauss' enemy for life. In the
Theoria motus
Gauss had referred to his early discovery of the method of least squares. Legendre published the method in 1806, before Gauss. With great indignation he wrote to Gauss practically accusing him of dishonesty and complaining that Gauss, so rich in discoveries, might have had the decency not to appropriate the method of least squares, which Legendre regarded as his own ewe lamb. Laplace entered the quarrel. Whether he believed the assurances of Gauss that Legendre had indeed been anticipated by ten years or more, he does not say, but he retains his usual suavity. Gauss apparently disdained to argue the matter further. But in a letter to a friend he indicates the evidence which might have ended the dispute then and there had Gauss not been “too proud to fight.” “I communicated the whole matter to Olbers in 1802,” he says, and if Legendre had been inclined to doubt this he could have asked Olbers, who had the manuscript.

The dispute was most unfortunate for the subsequent development of mathematics, as Legendre passed on his unjustified suspicions to Jacobi and so prevented that dazzling young developer of the theory of elliptic functions from coming to cordial terms with Gauss. The
misunderstanding was all the more regrettable because Legendre was a man of the highest character and scrupulously fair himself. It was his fate to be surpassed by more imaginative mathematicians than himself in the fields where most of his long and laborious life was spent in toil which younger men—Gauss, Abel, and Jacobi—showed to have been superfluous. At every step Gauss strode far ahead of Legendre. Yet when Legendre accused him of unfair dealing Gauss felt that he himself had been left in the lurch. Writing to Schumacher (July SO, 1806), he complains that “It seems to be my fate to concur in nearly all my theoretical works with Legendre. So it is in the higher arithmetic, in the researches in transcendental functions connected with the rectification [the process for finding the length of an arc of a curve] of the ellipse, in the foundations of geometry and now again here [in the method of least squares, which] . . . is also used in Legendre's work and indeed right gallantly carried through.”

With the detailed publication of Gauss' posthumous papers and much of his correspondence in recent years all these old disputes have been settled once for all in favor of Gauss. There remains another score on which he has been criticized, his lack of cordiality in welcoming the great work of others, particularly of younger men. When Cauchy began publishing his brilliant discoveries in the theory of functions of a complex variable, Gauss ignored them. No word of praise or encouragement came from the Prince of Mathematicians to the young Frenchman. Well, why should it have come? Gauss himself (as we have seen) had reached the heart of the matter years before Cauchy started. A memoir on the theory was to have been one of Gauss' masterpieces. Again, when Hamilton's work on quaternions (to be considered in a later chapter) came to his attention in
1852,
three years before his death, Gauss said nothing. Why should he have said anything? The crux of the matter lay buried in his notes of more than thirty years before. He held his peace and made no claim for priority. As in his anticipations of the theory of functions of a complex variable, elliptic functions, and non-Euclidean geometry, Gauss was content to have done the work.

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