Léon Lalanne

Léon Lalanne

Léon Louis Lalanne, real surname Chrétien-Lalanne (3 July 1811 – 12 March 1892) was a French engineer and politician.

Life

Lalanne was born in Paris on 3 July 1811, as Léon Louis Chrétien, the son of François Julien Léon Chrétien, a physician, and his wife Aurore Marie Damaris Langlois; his surname became Lalanne-Chrétien in 1820, Lalanne being the unmarried name of his father's first wife, and he dropped the Chrétien for practical use. He was the brother of the historian Ludovic Lalanne (1815–1898).[1]

Lalanne studied at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, where he was a classmate of Évariste Galois. From 1829 at the École Polytechnique, he went on to the École des ponts et chaussées in 1831. After that, he was a civil engineer, working mostly in northern France from 1832 to 1843.[1] In 1837 he went on the group visit to Southern Russia organised by Anatoly Demidov.[2] From 1839 he was working also with Jean-Claude-Républicain Arnoux, his future father-in-law, on the Ligne de Sceaux; he married in 1841.[1]

During the Revolution of 1848, Lalanne was briefly made head of the Ateliers Nationaux (National Workshops). He undertook a severe rationalisation of the structure set up by Émile Thomas.[3] Brought in during May, he had closed down the institutions of the Ateliers by the end of June.[4] In the civil unrest that occurred simultaneously he commanded a battalion of the Garde Nationale in Paris. He was detained as a subversive on 29 June, but all charges were dropped on 5 August.[1]

As a civil engineer, Lalanne became known for railway construction in Spain, Switzerland and Wallachia, where he was first engaged in 1852.[5] He went to Bucharest in 1852, but encountered difficult local conditions. Russian operations against Ottoman possessions from July 1853, preceding the outbreak within months of the Crimean War, made his position untenable as French and British diplomats left.[1]

From 1853 Lalanne directed the construction of railway lines in France (Part route to Strasbourg, Ardennes, Boulogne and Calais, etc.), in Switzerland (1856–1860, the railway network to the west) and northern Spain (1860/61) and the route Cordoba and Seville. He made a further visit to Wallachia in 1856. From inspector-general (1867), Lalanne in 1876 became director of the École des ponts et chaussées. Further experiences along the Danube involved Lalanne in Budapest, and in Silistra with a bridge project, and monitoring involved with demarcation after the Treaty of Berlin (1878).[1]

In 1879 Lalanne became a member of the Académie des sciences.[6] In 1881 he retired, and was made a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour. He became involved in politics again in the moderate left-wing. In 1883 he became a senator for life (sénateur inamovible). In 1882, he was Chairman of the Compagnie des omnibus de Paris.[1][7]

Works

The context of much of Lalanne's work was the construction of the Belgian and French rail systems.[8]

Cartography

With Charles Joseph Minard, another civil engineer of the Ponts et Chaussées, Lalanne is considered to have made important contributions to rigorous cartography.[9] He first clarified the distinction between an isometric line and an isopleth.[10]

Interested in population density and centres, Lalanne plotted innovative maps (1845) with contours of the same population density, and announced an "equilateral law" of equal spacing of the centres (1875), which he found a good fit in France.[11][12] A paper of 1863 raised general considerations on transport routes and population distributions, direction later covered in work of Walter Christaller.[13]

Mathematics

Léon Lalanne's "abacus" or "universal computer", 1843

With Philbert Maurice d'Ocagne Lalanne is considered the inventor of the nomogram. The intention was to replace the slide rule.[8] In a paper of 1846 Lalanne contributed to the subject the ideas of anamorphosis and the use of projective transformations. There were applications to the solution of the cubic equation.[14] He called his nomographic device the "abac".[15] This "universal calculator" had 60 functions implemented graphically. Half a century later Maurice d'Ocagne provided a general theory, founded in projective geometry, for the nonlinear scales related by nomography.[16]

In 1840 Lalanne announced balanced ternary as an arithmetical system, in Comptes Rendus;[17] this followed earlier work on signed arithmetic by John Leslie and Augustin Cauchy.[18] Also in 1840 he devised a mechanical computer capable of solving numerically polynomial equations up to degree seven.[19]

Charles Darwin cited a paper by Lalanne from the same year 1840 on the geometry of honeycombs, in his Natural Selection manuscript.[20]

Infographics

Lalande made a number of innovations in graphics. His "universal computer" was based on a log-log plot.[2] In 1830 he drew a polar area diagram of ocean wind strength.[21]

Civil engineering

As a civil engineer, Lalanne invented and published a graphical method to optimize the design of roads, now known as the épure de Lalanne. He researched it during the 1830s, and published supporting tables.[1] Along the planned route earth masses are plotted (with a negative or positive sign) as the abscissa, the sign reflecting whether spoil is to be removed or earth to be added. Estimates of mass movement become an area under the curve.

Political economy and technology

In 1840 Lalanne wrote an encyclopedia article Technologie for Un million des faits that cited both Charles Babbage and Claude Lucien Bergery, in reducing the problems of manufacturing to "technology".[22] The following year in a comparable article Essai philosophique sur la technologie for the Encyclopédie nouvelle, edited by Pierre Leroux and Jean Reynaud, and intended for a less popular readership, he attempted a definition of the neologism "cerdoristique industrielle"[23] of André-Marie Ampère. In so doing he cited Babbage favourably on management accounting principles, and Andrew Ure.[24][25]

A strong critic of the principle of division of labour pushed to its logical conclusion, Lalanne picked up the reasoning of Pierre-Édouard Lémontey and took it further. Seeing repetitive work without variation as negative, he saw the solution as lying in automation.[26]

Books

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Jean Marie Mayeur; Alain Corbin; Arlette Schweitz (1 January 1995). Les immortels du Sénat, 1875-1918: les cent seize inamovibles de la Troisième République. Publications de la Sorbonne. pp. 368–70. ISBN 978-2-85944-273-6.
  2. 1 2 "http://libweb5.princeton.edu/visual_materials, Meteorology". Retrieved 16 April 2015. External link in |title= (help)
  3. Armies of the Poor: Determinants of Working-Class Participation in the Parisian Insurrection of June 1848. Transaction Publishers. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-4128-1748-6.
  4. Max Weber (2009). Arbeiterfrage und Arbeiterbewegung: Vorlesungen 1895-1898 (in German). Mohr Siebeck. p. 329. ISBN 978-3-16-150133-3.
  5. Rondo E. Cameron (2000). France and the Economic Development of Europe, 1800-1914. Psychology Press. p. 572. ISBN 978-0-415-19011-4.
  6. Christian Verlaque; Hafedh Séthom (1964). Le sahara pétrolier: L'artisanat de la poterie en Tunisie. Bibliothèque Nationale. p. 63. ISBN 978-2-7355-0063-5.
  7. Jean Marie Mayeur; Alain Corbin; Arlette Schweitz (1 January 1995). Les immortels du Sénat, 1875-1918: les cent seize inamovibles de la Troisième République. Publications de la Sorbonne. p. 28. ISBN 978-2-85944-273-6.
  8. 1 2 I. Grattan-Guinness (2003). Companion Encyclopedia of the History and Philosophy of the Mathematical Sciences. JHU Press. p. 576. ISBN 978-0-8018-7396-6.
  9. Josef Konvitz (1987). Cartography in France, 1660-1848: Science, Engineering, and Statecraft. University of Chicago Press. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-226-45094-0.
  10. Josef Konvitz (1987). Cartography in France, 1660-1848: Science, Engineering, and Statecraft. University of Chicago Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-226-45094-0.
  11. Bernard Lepetit (21 July 1994). The Pre-industrial Urban System: France 1740-1840. Cambridge University Press. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-521-41734-1.
  12. Rainer Gömmel; Markus A. Denzel (2002). Weltwirtschaft und Wirtschaftsordnung: Festschrift für Jürgen Schneider zum 65. Geburtstag (in French). Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 269. ISBN 978-3-515-08043-9.
  13. William Richard Black (2003). Transportation: A Geographical Analysis. Guilford Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-57230-848-0.
  14. Harold Ainsley Evesham (26 December 2010). The History and Development of Nomography. Docent Press. pp. 7–11. ISBN 978-1-4564-7962-6.
  15. Josef Konvitz (1987). Cartography in France, 1660-1848: Science, Engineering, and Statecraft. University of Chicago Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-226-45094-0.
  16. Jorg Blasius; Michael Greenacre (10 April 2014). Visualization and Verbalization of Data. CRC Press. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-1-4665-8980-3.
  17. Midhat J. Gazalé (2000). Number: From Ahmes to Cantor. Princeton University Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-691-00515-X.
  18. Brian Hayes (1 April 2008). Group Theory in the Bedroom, and Other Mathematical Diversions. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-4299-3857-0.
  19. Peter Pesic (2003). Abel's Proof: An Essay on the Sources and Meaning of Mathematical Unsolvability. MIT Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-262-66182-9.
  20. Charles Darwin; R. C. Stauffer (26 November 1987). Charles Darwin's Natural Selection: Being the Second Part of His Big Species Book Written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge University Press. pp. 513 note 1. ISBN 978-0-521-34807-2.
  21. Leland Wilkinson (28 January 2006). The Grammar of Graphics. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-387-28695-2.
  22. François Vatin (2007). Morale industrielle et calcul économique dans le premier XIXe siècle: Claude-Lucien Bergery, 1787-1863 (in French). Harmattan. p. 123. ISBN 978-2-296-03105-0.
  23. "cerdoristique : définition de cerdoristique, citations, exemples et usage pour cerdoristique dans le dictionnaire de français Littré adapté du grand dictionnaire de la langue française d'Emile Littré" (in French). Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  24. François Vatin (2007). Morale industrielle et calcul économique dans le premier XIXe siècle: Claude-Lucien Bergery, 1787-1863 (in French). Harmattan. pp. 133–4. ISBN 978-2-296-03105-0.
  25. René Crescent; Richard Langlois (2004). La technologie: une culture, des pratiques et des acteurs. Éditions MultiMondes. p. 45. ISBN 978-2-89544-066-6.
  26. François Vatin (2007). Morale industrielle et calcul économique dans le premier XIXe siècle: Claude-Lucien Bergery, 1787-1863 (in French). Harmattan. pp. 219–20. ISBN 978-2-296-03105-0.

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