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Nicolaus Mercator : ウィキペディア英語版
Nicholas Mercator

Nicholas (''Nikolaus'') Mercator (c. 1620, Holstein – 1687, Versailles), also known by his Germanic name ''Kauffmann'', was a 17th-century mathematician.
He lived in the Netherlands from 1642 to 1648. He lectured at the University of Copenhagen during 1648–1654 and lived in Paris from 1655 to 1657. He was mathematics tutor to Joscelyne Percy, son of the 10th Earl of Northumberland, at Petworth, Sussex (1657). He taught mathematics in London (1658–1682). In 1666 he became a member of the Royal Society. He designed a marine chronometer for Charles II, and designed and constructed the fountains at the Palace of Versailles (1682–1687).
Mathematically, he is most well known for his treatise ''Logarithmo-technica'' on logarithms, published in 1668. In this treatise he described the Mercator series, also independently discovered by Gregory Saint-Vincent:
:\ln(1 + x) = x - \fracx^2 + \fracx^3 - \fracx^4 + \cdots.
It was also in this treatise that the first known use of the term ''natural logarithm'' appears, in the Latin form ''log naturalis''. His use of this term is somewhat surprising, since it predates the development of infinitesimal calculus, in which the most natural properties of this logarithm appear.
To the field of music he contributed the first precise account of 53 equal temperament, which was of theoretical importance, but not widely practiced.
==References==

* Francis Maseres & Charles Hutton (1791) (Scriptores Logarithmici ), link from Google Books.
* (Nicolaus Mercator and his Ratio Theory ) at (Convergence ).

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