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Hugo Ballin's Los Angeles

Caroline Luce, Author

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Central Rotunda - Mathematics and Physics



  • John Mosley's Caption
  • Allegory and History
  • Monumental Men
  • Source/Citations


From Mosley's pamphlet, "The Hugo Ballin Murals at the Griffith Observatory" (Los Angeles: Published by the Griffith Observatory, Department of Parks and Recreation, City of Los Angeles, 1998):

“From left to right, the Greek mathematician Poppus of Alexandria holds entwined circles and a triangle. The Greeks developed geometry some 2500 years ago. Behind him is an ibis, which Egyptians identified with the god Thoth, measurer of time and inventor of numbers.

The Arab studying the slab celebrates the contributions of his culture to mathematics, specifically the Arabic numbers we still use today (and which replaced the cumbersome Roman numerals), algebra (an Arabic word and an Arabic invention), and the transmission to Europe of the Hindu concept of zero (which makes decimal notation possible).

The seated man surrounded by experimental apparatus represents physics, the study of matter and energy. He gazes into the murky unknown, perhaps looking for inspiration in understanding how nature works. The little figure above him is descending amid rays to earth from the infinite.

Continuing to the right, Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) derived the law of gravity, explained the spectrum of light, and developed the important branch of mathematics known as calculus. He gazes into a globe while facing three medieval students of ‘natural philosophy,’ as physics was then called. The student in the foreground holds a jar of water with a cloth in it to represent capillary action. The second student drops the ball to illustrate gravity. The third holds a horseshoe magnet, and behind him is a magnetic needle pointing north.”


 
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