Alhazen, (pseudonym of Abu
Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham), born in Basra, Iraq, and who
lived from 965-1039, was perhaps the greatest of all the great Muslim
physicists, and was also one of the greatest physicists with an interest in
optics of all time. Considered to be “the
father of modern optics”, he was an original thinker and an historian, an overall
scientist, preserving the ancient,
accentuating the modern and creative in his own right.
The woodcut illustration—deceptively
complex but rather simple once you focus-- from his book Opticae
thesavrvs. Alhazeni Arabis libri septem, nuncprimum editi. Eivsdem liber De
crepvscvlis & nubium ascensionibus… demonstrates a number of optical principles--if
you look hard enough. (The Opticae by the way was about the only one of his 200 or so books to have survived the destructive powers of time and neglect.) In the foreground we see tow examples in the
field of optics of keen interest to Alhazen. The man standing in the puddle up to his knees in water shows the
distortion that occurs due to refraction (an area in which he greatly improved
upon Ptolemy’s understanding) The guy to
the right of naked knee-distorted man is probably using his mirror to keep an
eye out on what was happening behind him (it looks as though the person he’s
spying is not him but someone hiding behind the hillock). This small defensive use of the mirror pales
in comparison to what was happening as a cause of mirrors directly behind
him: the galleons are definitely being
set ablaze by the Archimedean-like use of mirrors in the city on the far side
of the harbor (like Syracuse), and we can see that one of the ships is already
nearly sunken.
Great post about Alhazen! I especially enjoyed your analysis of the woodcut. If your readers would like to know more about Alhazen, I would like to recommend my new book, Ibn al-Haytham: First Scientist. Written for young adults, it is the world's first full biography of the eleventh-century Muslim scholar known in the West as Alhazen or Alhacen.
Posted by: Bradley Steffens | 18 April 2008 at 12:07 PM