Filters:
People: Walter III of Brienne

Jing Fang, a music theorist, mathematician and …

Years: 37BCE - 37BCE

Jing Fang, a music theorist, mathematician and astrologer born in 78 BCE present-day Puyang, Henan during the Han Dynasty, is most known for being the first to notice how closely a succession of fifty-three just fifths approximates thirty-one octaves.

He came upon this observation after learning to calculate the Pythagorean comma between twelve fifths and seven octaves (this had been published around 122 BCE in the Huainanzi, a book written for the prince of Huainan), and extended this method fivefold to a scale composed of sixty fifths, finding that after fifty-three, new values became incredibly close to tones already calculated.

This value will later be calculated precisely by Nicholas Mercator in the seventeenth century.

Jing Fang is also a proponent of the 'radiating influence' theory in China, which states that the light of the moon is merely the light reflected from the sun, and that the celestial bodies are spherical.

Dismissed by the philosopher Wang Chong (CE 27–97), yet embraced by the mathematician, inventor, and scientist Zhang Heng (CE 78–139), Jing Fang’s theory would eventually be accepted as accurate.

He dies in 37 BCE.

Related Events

Filter results