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JOHN LANDEN (1719–1790)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 154 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN LANDEN (1719–1790)  ,
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English mathematician, was born at Peakirk near
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Peterborough in Northamptonshire on the 23rd of
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January 1719, and died on the 15th of January 1790 at Milton in the same county . He lived a very retired
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life, and saw little or nothing of society; when he did mingle in it, his dogmatism and pugnacity caused him to be generally shunned . In 1762 he was appointed agent to the
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Earl Fitzwilliam, and held that office to within two years of his
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death . He was first known as a mathematician by his essays in the Ladies'
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Diary for 1744 . In 1766 he was elected a
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fellow of the Royal Society . He was well acquainted with the
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works of the mathematicians of his own time, and has been called the " English d'Alembert." In his Discourse on the " Residual Analysis," he proposes to avoid the metaphysical difficulties of the method of fluxions by a purely algebraical method . The idea may be compared with that of Joseph Louis Lagrange's Calcul
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des Fonctions . His memoir (1775) on the rotatory motion of a
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body contains (as the author was aware) conclusions at variance with those arrived at by
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Jean le Rond, d'Alembert and Leonhard Euler in their researches on the same subject . He reproduces and further develops and defends his own views in his Mathematical
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Memoirs, and in his paper in the Philosophical Transactions for 1785 . But Landen's capital
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discovery is that of the theorem known by his name (obtained in its
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complete form in the memoir of 1775, and reproduced in the first
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volume of the Mathematical Memoirs) for the expression of the arc of an
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hyperbola in terms of two elliptic arcs . His researches on elliptic functions are of considerable elegance, but their
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great merit lies in the stimulating effect which they had on later mathematicians . He also showed that the roots of a cubic equation can be derived by means of the infinitesimal calculus .

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list of his writings is as follows:—Ladies' Diary, various communications (1744–1760); papers in the Phil . Trans . (1754, 1760, 1768, 1771, 1775, 1777, 1785); Mathematical Lucubrations (1755); A Discourse concerning the Residual Analysis (1758); The Residual Analysis,
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book i . (1764); Animadversions on Dr Stewart's Method of computing the Sun's Distance from the Earth (1771) ; Mathematical Memoirs (1780, 1789) .

End of Article: JOHN LANDEN (1719–1790)
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RICHARD LEMON LANDER (1804–1834)

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