Robert Grosseteste


Quick Info

Born
1168
Stradbroke, Suffolk, England
Died
9 October 1253
Buckden, Buckinghamshire, England

Summary
Robert Grosseteste was an English bishop who worked on geometry, optics and astronomy and made Latin translations of many Greek and Arabic scientific writings.

Biography

Robert Grosseteste was educated at Oxford University. He became Chancellor of Oxford University in 1215 remaining in this post until about 1221. After this he held a number of ecclesiastical positions, then from 1229 to 1235 he was a lecturer in theology to the Franciscans.

He became Bishop of Lincoln in 1235 and remained in this position until his death. As Bishop of Lincoln he attended the Council of Lyon (1245) and addressed the papal congregation at Lyon in 1250.

Grosseteste worked on geometry, optics and astronomy. In optics he experimented with mirrors and with lenses. He believed that experimentation must be used to verify a theory by testing its consequences. In his work De Iride he writes:-
This part of optics, when well understood, shows us how we may make things a very long distance off appear as if placed very close, and large near things appear very small, and how we may make small things placed at a distance appear any size we want, so that it may be possible for us to read the smallest letters at incredible distances, or to count sand, or seed, or any sort or minute objects.
Grosseteste realised that the hypothetical space in which Euclid imagined his figures was the same everywhere and in every direction. He then postulated that this was true of the propagation of light. He wrote the treatise De Luce on light.

In De Natura Locorum he gives a diagram which shows light being refracted by a spherical glass container full of water.

Grosseteste also made Latin translations of many Greek and Arabic scientific writings. He wrote a commentary on Aristotle's Posterior Analytics and Physics and many treatises on scientific subjects including De Generatione Stellarum, Theorica Planetarum and De astrolabio . In an astronomy text he claimed that the Milky Way was the fusion of light from many small close stars.

Roger Bacon was Grosseteste's student.


References (show)

  1. A C Crombie, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
    See THIS LINK.
  2. Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica.
    http://www.britannica.com/biography/Robert-Grosseteste
  3. A C Crombie, Robert Grosseteste and the Origins of Experimental Science 1100-1700 (Oxford, 1971).
  4. R C Dales, The computistical works ascribed to Robert Grosseteste, Isis 80 (1989), 74-79.
  5. E S Laird, Robert Grosseteste, Albumasar, and medieval tidal theory, Isis 81 (309) (1990), 684-694.
  6. C A Lértora Mendoza, The astronomical tables copied by Robert Grosseteste (Spanish), Mathesis. Mathesis 7 (4) (1991), 429-443.
  7. C A Lértora Mendoza, The 'Ars inveniendi eclipsim solis et lunae' copied by Robert Grosseteste (Spanish), Mathesis. Mathesis 5 (3) (1989), 371-384.
  8. C A Lértora Mendoza, The work 'De quadratura circuli', attributed to Robert Grosseteste (Spanish), Mathesis. Mathesis 3 (4) (1987), 389-400.
  9. E F Serene, Robert Grosseteste on induction and demonstrative science, Synthese 40 (1) (1979), 97-115.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update December 1996