Gaspar Lax
Gaspar Lax (1487, Sariñena – 23 February 1560, Saragossa) was a Spanish mathematician, logician, and philosopher who spent much of his career in Paris.
Lax studied the Seven Liberal Arts and theology at the University of Saragossa, where he acquired a master's degree. He taught in 1507–1508 at the Collège de Calvi in Paris and then at the Collège de Montaigu, where he was a student of John Mair (or Major) and simultaneously was a teacher himself. From 1517 Lax was again at the Collège de Calvi. In Paris he was known as the "Prince of Sophists". He taught in Paris until 1523 and then returned to Spain because in that year all foreigners were requested to leave the Parisian universities. Starting in 1525 he taught mathematics and philosophy at the University of Saragossa and remained there until his death. In addition to his teaching, Lax was vice-chancellor and rector of the University of Saragossa.
Works
- Tractatus exponibilitum Propositionum, 1507
- De Syllogismis, 1509
- De Solubilibus et Insolubilibus, 1511
- De Oppositionibus Propositionum cathegoricarum et earum Aequipollentiis, 1512
- De Impositionibus y Obligationes, 1512
- Arithmetica speculativa, 1515
- Proportiones, 1515
- De proportionibus arithmeticis, 1515
- Quaestiones phisicales, 1527
Sources
- The Arithmetica of Lax is discussed in David Eugene Smith Rara Arithmetica, Boston, London 1908.
- The logic and philosophy of Lax are discussed in Marcial Solana Historia de la filosofia española, Época del Renacimiento (siglo XVI), Madrid 1941, Vol. III, pp. 19–33.
External links
- William A. Wallace Gaspard Lax in Dictionary of Scientific Biography
- Lax, Gaspar – The Galileo Project
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Gaspar Lax", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.