Eadem mutata resurgo![]() Eadem mutata resurgo is a Latin phrase that literally translates to "Although changed, I arise the same". BackgroundThe word-for-word translation of the phrase is
The sense is better rendered in English as "I rise again changed but the same". Jakob Bernoulli's tombstone![]() The phrase was first known to be used by Jakob Bernoulli (1654-1705), a member of the famous Swiss mathematical family. He had studied logarithmic spirals during his life and directed for a spiral and the motto to appear on his tombstone in Basel. Bernoulli was referring to the fact that the logarithmic spirals are self-similar, meaning that upon applying any similarity transformation to the spiral, the resulting spiral is congruent to the original untransformed one.[1] The logarithmic spiral frequently appears in biology, such as with the curves of the Nautilus shell.[1] College mottoThe College of St Hild and St Bede at the University of Durham adopted this phrase for its motto; it hangs in the Vernon Arms (the Vern). [2] It is also used as the motto of the Collège de 'pataphysique.[3] References
|
Portal di Ensiklopedia Dunia