Ruđer Bošković – The men of the millenium
A Powerful Intellect and an Astute Intuition


     

In his lifetime a personality of high esteem in European scientific circles, however, it was only the recent times how he was ahead his time and, in many things, a precursor of scientific achievements. Ruđer Bošković, one of famous Dubrovniker of all times, excelled with intellect, imagination and intuition with indelible traces in European history of science.

Ruđer Bošković, one of the greatest scholars of his time, was born in Dubrovnik on May 18, 1711. At 14, after an education at the Jesuit College in Dubrovnik ('Collegium Ragusinum'), he went to Rome to pursue his studies with the Jesuits there. Before departing for France and England in 1759, a professor of physics and mathematics, he taught at the Jesuit schools in Fermo and Rome. At his most prolific years, he published some forty treatises and prepared his most relevant work on natural philosophy. Some of his papers deal with issues on light, on the law of continuity, and on the laws of natural powers. Bošković also made his name when he measured the two meridian degrees in the Papal State by using apparatus and gauging methods he himself improved. traveling extensively throughout Europe, he stopped in Paris and in Vienna, where he published his most important work on Pihlosophiae naturalis theoria redacta ad unicam legem virium in Natura existentuim (known under a shorter title as A Theory of Natural Pholosophy). In London he studied solar and lunar eclipses. A tempest prevented his ship from arriving in Istambul from Venice in time to observe the passage of Venus by the Sun – disembarked at the islet of Tened, he studied the ruins of Troy instead. From Istanbul, having missed the desired experience of an unusual encounter of the planets, he set off to Bulgaria, then to Moldavia and then to Poland, the voyage minutely described in his diary. In 1770 he moved to Milan to teach at the new department of astronomy and optics, but having failed the appointment to the director of the observatory in which he had invested his own money and time, disillusioned, he moved to Venice. Though away almost all his lifetime, Bošković never lost his links with Dubrovnik, maintained especially through a regular correspondence with his elder brother Baro and sister Anica. He never stopped to care for the welfare of his native town, and was always ready to answer requests by the Dubrovnik Senate and to assist in diplomatic and political issues. reflecting upon a return home, yet incessantly busy, he went to Milan to prepare for the publication of his five – volume work 'Pieces from Optics and Astronomy' where he died in 1787.
Ruđer Bošković was not only a scholar, but, to the fashion of his time, a Latin poet, too. His poetic versatility shines in De solis ac Lunae defectubis, describing abstract astronomic theories in easy flowing, elegant hexameters. He was a fellow of the Roman Arcadia that published his poetry in its editions. In his lifetime he was personality of high esteem in European scientific circles. However, only recent times have defined just much Bošković was ahead of his time and, in many things, a precursor of scientific achievements. Ruđer Bošković, one of the most famous Dubrovnikers of all times, excelled with an intellect, imagination and intuition that have left indelible traces in the history of European science.

 

 
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