Posted on May 7, 2021
This is an update of my post published on May 7, 2010:
On this date in 1713, a mathematical prodigy was born in Paris, France.
Or was in on May 3, 1713, that Alexis Claude Clairaut was born?
But four websites said May 3, four said May 7, four said May 13!
So this number guy, this fellow who was soooo good with numbers, has three different numbers associated with his birth!
They can’t all be “right.”
On the one hand, who cares? He was born in the first half of May. While he was alive, he may well have celebrated his birthday on a convenient day rather than the “actual” birthday (assuming that he knew the accurate birthday!)
.On the other hand, could there be an explanation for why these different dates are floating around? Is it as simple as a mistake in copying? Did some sources just copy-paste what they found elsewhere, without checking its accuracy? Could it be that the variation comes from the world’s uneven switching over from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar? Is the birth date itself unrecorded, and all we have is the baptismal date—and then various scholars made different assumptions about the actual birth date?
I have no idea!
Okay, what about the rest of the life of this “numbers guy”? He was a child prodigy, right?
A prodigy is someone who has exceptional talent at something, and a child prodigy is one whose exceptional talent is recogni
zed at an early age. Mozart was a child prodigy in music, and Clairaut was a math prodigy.He learned to read by reading Euclid’s Elements, he mastered calculus and analytical geometry by age 9, and he read his first mathematical paper to the Academy at age 13!
At age 18, he became the youngest person ever elected to the Paris Academy.Those are some amazing numbers, huh?
Another number associated with Clairaut’s life is very sad—his mom and dad had 20 kids, but he was the only one who survived to adulthood.
Clairaut’s contributions Clairaut was considered a human computer, and he used his number skills to do a lot of important things:
Celebrate Clairaut with Math Fun!
Try this Mind-Reader Game. Can you figure out what’s going on?
Enjoy these beautiful and mathematically fascinating fractals!
Here are several kinds of math puzzles to enjoy!
Check out the Cool Math 4 Kids website for math games and brain teasers.
Doing a Magic Square can be challenging—but fun!
Also on this date:
Anniversary of the completion of Desert Breath
Plan ahead:
Check out my Pinterest boards for:
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May holidays
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May birthdays
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Historical anniversaries in May
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June holidays
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June birthdays
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Historical anniversaries in June