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Thabit
Ibn Qurra Ibn Marwan al-Sabi al-Harrani
Thabit Marwanwas born in the year 836 C.E. at Harran (present Turkey). As
the name indicates he was basically a member of the Sabian sect, but the great
Muslim mathematician Muhammad Ibn Musa Ibn Shakir, impressed by his knowledge of
languages, and realising his potential for a scientific career, selected him to
join the scientific group at Baghdad
that was being patronised by the Abbasid Caliphs. There, he studied under the
famous Banu Musa brothers. It was in this setting that Thabit contributed to
several branches of science, notably mathematics, astronomy and mechanics, in
addition to translating a large number of works from Greek to Arabic. Later, he
was patronized by the Abbasid Caliph al-M'utadid. After a long career of
scholarship, Thabit died at Baghdad in 901 C.E.
Thabit's major contribution
lies in mathematics and astronomy. He was instrumental in extending the concept
of traditional geometry to geometrical algebra and proposed several theories
that led to the development of non-Euclidean geometry, spherical trigonometry,
integral calculus and real numbers. He criticized a number of theorems of Euclid's
elements and proposed important improvements. He applied arithmetical
terminology to geometrical quantities, and studied several aspects of conic
sections, notably those of parabola and ellipse. A number of his computations
aimed at determining the surfaces and volumes of different types of bodies and
constitute, in fact, the processes of integral calculus, as developed later.
In astronomy he was one of
the early reformers of Ptolemic views. He
analysed several.
Problems related to the movements of sun and moon and wrote treatises on
sun-dials.
In the fields of mechanics
and physics he may be
recognised as the
founder of
static’s.
He examined conditions of equilibrium of bodies, beams and levers.
In addition to translating a
large number of books himself, he founded a school of translation and supervised
the translation of a further large number of books from Greek to Arabic.
Among Thabit's writings a
large number have survived, while several are not extant. Most of the books are
on mathematics, followed by astronomy and medicine. The books have been written
in Arabic but some are in Syriac. In the Middle Ages, some of his books were
translated into Latin by Gherard of Cremona. In recent centuries, a number of
his books have been translated into European languages and published.
He carried further the work
of the Banu Musa brothers and later his son and grandson continued in this
tradition, together with the other members of the group. His original books as
well as his translations accomplished in the 9th century exerted a positive
influence on the development of subsequent scientific research.
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