Everything about Jing Fang totally explained
Jing Fang (
78-
37 BC), born
Li Fang (李房),
courtesy name Junming (君明), was a
Chinese music theorist,
mathematician and
astrologer born in present-day
Puyang, Henan during the
Han Dynasty. He is most known for being the first to notice how closely a succession of 53
just fifths approximates 31
octaves. This observation would much later lead to the discovery of
53 equal temperament.
Music theory
He came upon this observation after learning to calculate the
pythagorean comma between 12 fifths and 7 octaves (this had been published ca. 122 BC in the
Huainanzi, a book written for
the prince of
Huainan), and extended this method fivefold to a scale composed of 60 fifths, finding that after 53 new values became incredibly close to tones already calculated.
He accomplished this calculation by beginning with a suitable large starting value (
) that could be divided by three easily, and proceeded to calculate the relative values of successive tones by the following method:
- Divide the value by three.
- Add this value to the original.
- The new value is now equal to of the original, or a perfect fourth, which is equivalent to a perfect fifth inverted at the octave. (Alternatively he'd subtract from the interval, equivalent to a perfect fifth down, in order to keep all of the values greater than 177147, or less than 354294, its double, effectively transposing them all into the range of a single octave.)
- Proceed now from this new value to generate the next tone; repeat until all tones have been generated.
To produce an exact calculation, some 26 digits of accuracy would have been required. Instead, by rounding to about 6 digits, his calculations are within 0.0145
cents of exactness, which is a difference much finer than is usually perceptible. The final value he gave for the ratio between this 53rd fifth and the original was
.
This value would later be calculated precisely by
Nicholas Mercator in the seventeenth century (
see: history of 53 equal temperament).
Astronomy
Jing Fang was a proponent of the 'radiating influence' theory in ancient China, which stated that the light of the moon was merely the light reflected from the sun, and that the celestial bodies were spherical. This accurate theory was dismissed by the philosopher
Wang Chong (27–97 AD), yet embraced by the mathematician, inventor, and scientist
Zhang Heng (78–139 AD). Jing Fang stated:
Further Information
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