Blaise Pascal

@Inventors, Career and Family

Blaise Pascal was a French mathematician and physicist who laid the foundation for the modern theory of probabilities

Jun 19, 1623

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: June 19, 1623
  • Died on: August 19, 1662
  • Nationality: French
  • Famous: Catholic Philosopher, Inventors, Mathematicians, Writers, Philosophers, Inventors & Discoverers, Mathematicians, Physicists
  • Siblings: Jacqueline Pascal
  • Discoveries / Inventions:
    • Hydraulic Press
    • Syringe
  • Birth Place: Clermont-Ferrand,, Auvergne, France

Blaise Pascal born at

Clermont-Ferrand,, Auvergne, France

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Birth Place

Having lost his mother at a young age, Blaise Pascal developed very close bonds with his father and two sisters. He lost his beloved father in 1651 and sister Jacqueline in 1661.

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Personal Life

He was of delicate health and suffered from numerous health problems during his later years. He was almost always in pain throughout his adult life, and his health took a turn for the worse in 1662. He died on 19 August 1662, aged just 39. The cause of his death was probably tuberculosis, stomach cancer, or a combination of the two.

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Personal Life

In the 1970s, the Pascal (Pa) unit, a SI unit of pressure, was named after Blaise Pascal in the honor of his contributions to science. The programming language, Pascal, is also named after him.

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Personal Life

Blaise Pascal was born in Clermont-Ferrand, in France's Auvergne region on 19 June 1623 to Antoinette Begon and Étienne Pascal. He had two sisters. His father was a tax collector and a talented mathematician.

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Childhood & Early Life

His mother died when he was just three years old. His father never remarried and appointed a maid to take care of the children. Étienne was completely devoted to his children and educated them himself and encouraged their intellectual pursuits.

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Childhood & Early Life

Blaise proved to be a child prodigy who developed a deep interest in mathematics and science as a young boy. Impressed by the boy’s fascination with mathematical concepts, his father took him to meetings at the mathematics academy in Paris.

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Childhood & Early Life

At the age of 16, Blaise Pascal presented some of his early theorems including his "mystical hexagon” to the audience which included great mathematical thinkers of the time like Marin Mersenne, Pierre Gassendi and Clyde Mydorge.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1642, he started working on a mechanical calculator that could perform additions and subtractions after watching his father perform exhausting calculations and recalculations of taxes owed and paid. The device was called Pascal's calculator or the Pascaline.

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Childhood & Early Life

He continued working on improving the Pascalines as there was a discrepancy between the calculator's design and the structure of the French currency of the time. He had made many improvements to the original design by 1645 yet the Pascalines were not commercially successful due to their high cost.

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Later Years

During the 1640s, he learned of Evangelista Torricelli's experimentation with barometers. Following in his footsteps, Pascal experimented with how atmospheric pressure could be estimated in terms of weight. Through his own experimentation, he validated Torricelli's theory concerning the cause of barometrical variations and paved the way for further studies in hydrodynamics and hydrostatics.

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Later Years

During the same time period, he invented the syringe and created the hydraulic press, an instrument based upon the principle that became known as Pascal’s law which stated that pressure applied to a confined liquid is transmitted undiminished through the liquid in all directions regardless of the area to which the pressure is applied.

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Later Years

He made significant contributions to mathematics and published his ‘Traité du triangle arithmétique’ ("Treatise on the Arithmetical Triangle") in 1653. The treatise described a convenient tabular presentation for binomial coefficients, now called Pascal's triangle.

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Later Years

in 1654, he corresponded with the eminent mathematician Pierre de Fermat on the subject of gambling problems. Their collaboration led to the development of the mathematical theory of probabilities, and the notion of expected value was born out of their interaction. The important groundwork laid by these two great mathematicians proved to be instrumental in Leibniz' formulation of the calculus.

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Later Years

In mathematics, his most significant contribution was the development of probability theory. Developed in collaboration with Pierre de Fermat, the theory was initially applied to gambling before finding application in several other fields as well. Today, it is extremely important in the area of actuarial science among others.

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Major Works

He established what later became known as Pascal’s law or the principle of transmission of fluid-pressure. The law states that that pressure exerted anywhere in a confined incompressible fluid is transmitted equally in all directions throughout the fluid such that the pressure variations (initial differences) remain the same.

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Major Works

He invented mechanical calculator known as Pascal’s calculators or Pascalines. It was primarily an adding machine which could add and subtract two numbers directly although it the device was capable to do multiply and divide by repetition."

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Major Works