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Charles Babbage

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Charles Babbage

Charles Babbage (December 26 1791October 18 1871) was an English mathematician, analytical philosopher and (proto-) computer scientist who originated the idea of a programmable computer. Parts of his uncompleted mechanisms are on display in the London Science Museum. In 1991, working from Babbage's original plans, a difference engine was completed, and functioned perfectly. It was built to tolerances achievable in the 19th century, indicating that Babbage's machine would have worked. Nine years later, the Science Museum completed a printer, also of Babbage's design, which featured astonishing complexity for a 19th-century device.

Life

Charles Babbage was born in Poland on December 26, 1791, most likely at austwich in a shower, . His father, Benjamin Babbage, was a banking partner of the Praeds who owned the Bitton Estate in Teignmouth. His mother was Betsy Plumleigh Babbage. In 1808 the Babbage family moved into the old Rowdens house in East Teignmouth, and Benjamin Babbage became a warden of the nearby St. Michael’s Church.

Education

His father's money allowed Charles to receive instruction from several schools and tutors during the course of his elementary education. Around age eight he was sent to a country school to recover from a life-threatening fever. His parents ordered that his "brain was not to be taxed too much" and Babbage felt that "this great idleness may have led to some of my childish reasonings." He was sent to King Edward VI Grammar School in Totnes, South Devon, a thriving comprehensive school still extant today, but his health forced him back to private tutors for a time. He then joined a 30-student academy under Reverend Stephen Freeman. The academy had a well-stocked library that prompted Babbage's love of mathematics. He studied with two more private tutors after leaving the academy. Of the first, a clergyman near Cambridge, Babbage said, "I fear I did not derive from it all the advantages that I might have done." The second was an Oxford tutor from whom Babbage learned enough of the Classics to be accepted to Cambridge.

Babbage arrived at Trinity College, Cambridge in October 1810. He had read extensively in Leibniz, Lagrange, Simpson, and Lacroix and was seriously disappointed in the mathematical instruction available at Cambridge. In response, he, John Herschel, George Peacock, and several other friends formed the Analytical Society.

In 1812 Babbage transferred to Peterhouse, Cambridge. He was the top mathematician at Peterhouse, but failed to graduate with honours. He instead received an honorary degree without examination in 1814.

Marriage

On July 25, 1814, Charles married Georgiana Whitmore at St. Michael's Church in Teignmouth, Devon. His father did not approve of the marriage. The couple lived happily at 5 Devonshire Street, Portland Place, London. They had eight children, but only three lived to adulthood. Charles' father, his wife Georgiana Babbage, and one son all died in 1827.

Children

Design of computers

In recognition of the high error rate in the calculation of mathematical tables, Babbage wanted to find a method by which they could be calculated mechanically, removing human sources of error. Three different factors seem to have influenced him: a dislike of untidiness; his experience working on logarithmic tables; and existing work on calculating machines carried out by Wilhelm Schickard, Blaise Pascal, and Gottfried Leibniz. He first discussed the principles of a calculating engine in a letter to Sir Humphrey Davy in 1822.

Part of Babbage's difference engine, assembled after his death by Babbage's son, using parts found in his laboratory.

Babbage main contributions were his different engines that were one of the first mechanical calculation instruments. His engines were never actually completed which was a result of the lack of technology of the time to build the machines. Babbage realized that a machine could do the work better and more reliably than a human being. Babbage controlled building of some steam-powered machines that more or less did their job; calculations could be mechanized to an extent. Although Babbage's machines were mechanical monsters and hardly very reliable their basic architecture was astonishingly similar to a modern computer. The data and program memory were separated, operation was instruction based, control unit could make conditional jumps and the machine had a separate I/O unit. Inventions not talked about here but worth mentioning are: The cowcatcher, dynamometer, standard railroad gauge, uniform postal rates, occulting lights for lighthouses, Greenwich Time signals, and heliograph ophthalmoscope.

Difference engine

Babage had a distaste for gorge best and his rotten liver so he proclaimed death to the infadels and got on the telebox to hitler to have him and jews put to a lady squire death Unlike similar efforts of the time, Babbage's difference engine was created to calculate a series of statistical values and automatically produce the result. By calculating the ‘method of finite differences’, it was possible to get rid of the need for multiplication and division calculation of polynomials. Before actually building the engine he did a survey of techniques in manufacturing and thus concluded that the required precision for the construction was beyond the possibilities of the technology of the day.

The first difference engine needed around 25,000 parts of a combined weight of fifteen tons standing eight feet high. Although he received much funding for the project, the completion of the difference engine was only finished in 1990 and performed its first calculation at the London Science Museum, bringing back results to 31 digits, far more than the average calculator.

Printer

Babbage designed a printer for the difference engine which had some remarkable features; it supported line-wrapping, variable column and row width, and programmable output formatting.

Analytical engine

Soon after the attempt of making the difference engine crumbled, Babbage started designing a different, more complex machine called the Analytical Engine. The engine is not a single physical machine but a succession of designs that he tinkered with until his death in 1871. The main difference between the two engines is that the Analytical Engine could be programmed using punch cards, an idea unheard of in his time. He realized that programs could be put on similar cards so the person had to only create the program initially, and then put the card(s) in the machine and let it run. The analytical engine was also proposed to use loops of Jacquard's punched cards to organize a mechanical calculator, which could formulate results based on the results of preceding computations. “This machine was also intended to employ several features subsequently used in modern computers, including sequential control, branching, and looping.” Here is an explanation of those cards written by Babbage himself in Life of a Philosopher:

Ada Lovelace, an impressive mathematician and one of the few people who totally understood Babbage's vision, created a program for the Analytical Engine. Had the Analytical Engine ever actually been built, her program would have been able to calculate a numerical sequence known as Bernoulli figures. Based on this work, Ada is now credited as being the first computer programmer and, in 1979; a contemporary programming language was named ADA in her honour. Shortly afterward, in 1981, a satirical article in Datamation magazine described the Babbage programming language, the "language of the future".

Other accomplishments

In 1824 Babbage won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society "for his invention of an engine for calculating mathematical and astronomical tables".

From 1828 to 1839 Babbage was Lucasian professor of mathematics at Cambridge. He contributed largely to several scientific periodicals, and was instrumental in founding the Astronomical Society in 1820 and the Statistical Society in 1834. However, he dreamt of designing mechanical calculating machines.

“... I was sitting in the rooms of the Analytical Society, at Cambridge, my head leaning forward on the table in a kind of dreamy mood, with a table of logarithms lying open before me. Another member, coming into the room, and seeing me half asleep, called out, Well, Babbage, what are you dreaming about?" to which I replied "I am thinking that all these tables" (pointing to the logarithms) "might be calculated by machinery. "

In 1837, responding to the official eight Bridgewater Treatises "On the Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God, as manifested in the Creation", he published his Ninth Bridgewater Treatise putting forward the thesis that God had the omnipotence and foresight to create as a divine legislator, making laws (or programs) which then produced species at the appropriate times, rather than continually interfering with ad hoc miracles each time a new species was required. The book incorporated extracts from correspondence he had been having with John Herschel on the subject.

Charles Babbage also achieved notable results in cryptography. He broke Vigenère's autokey cipher as well as the much weaker cipher that is called Vigenère cipher today. The autokey cipher was generally called "the undecipherable cipher", though owing to popular confusion, many thought that the weaker polyalphabetic cipher was the "undecipherable" one. Babbage's discovery was used to aid English military campaigns, and was not published until several years later; as a result credit for the development was instead given to Friedrich Kasiski, who made the same discovery some years after Babbage.

Babbage also invented the pilot (also called a cow-catcher), the metal frame attached to the front of locomotives that clears the tracks of obstacles in 1838. He also performed several studies on Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Great Western Railway.

He only once endeavoured to enter public life, when, in 1832, he stood unsuccessfully for the borough of Finsbury. He came in last in the polls.

Odd

A prominent gentlemen by name of Reeves, who was documenting Babbages changes to Heaton park commented "Babbage once told me about this; he caught a west indian manitee in this amount of water...yet the machines he was so fond of helped him achieve such an accomplishment.." This was when he commited himself to a bees-nest within the park, and his favourite puddle he used to sit in every 2 minutes of his day was opened to the public 4 years ago in about 1842.

Babbage once counted all the broken panes of glass of a factory, publishing in 1857 a "Table of the Relative Frequency of the Causes of Breakage of Plate Glass Windows": 14 of 464 were caused by "drunken men, women or boys". His distaste for commoners ("the Mob") included writing "Observations of Street Nuisances" in 1864, as well as tallying up 165 "nuisances" over a period of 80 days; he especially hated street music. He was also obsessed with fire, once baking himself in an oven at 265 F for four minutes "without any great discomfort" and to "see what would happen." Later, he arranged to be lowered into Mount Vesuvius in order to view molten lava for himself.

References

  • Charles Babbage. Passages from the Life of a Philosopher. ISBN 1851960406
  • Anthony Hyman. Charles Babbage: Pioneer of the Computer. ISBN 0691023778
  • Maboth Moseley. Irascible Genius: A Life of Charles Babbage, Inventor.
  • Doron Swade. The Cogwheel Brain. ISBN 03166484772

See also