Shizuki Tadao
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was a Japanese astronomer and translator of European scientific works into Japanese. Shizuki was adopted as a child into a family of translators from Dutch to Japanese, and in 1776 Shizuki began working in the family profession; however, in 1777 he stopped working in the family's ''tsuji'' tradition and began translating and writing commentaries on works of natural philosophy independently. He began using the name Ryuen Nakano, Nakano being his birth family name. Shizuki apprenticed under Ryoei Motoki (who had translated and interpreted Copernicus's works) in Nagasaki, which at that time was a rare hub for Japanese intellectuals to obtain and discuss Western ideas. Motoki and Shizuki collaborated on translations of Dutch scientific treatises, and helped introduce and popularize
Newtonian mechanics Newton's laws of motion are three basic laws of classical mechanics that describe the relationship between the motion of an object and the forces acting on it. These laws can be paraphrased as follows: # A body remains at rest, or in motion ...
to Japanese scholars, as well as ideas about planetary motion and calendrics ultimately derived from Copernicus and
Johannes Kepler Johannes Kepler (; ; 27 December 1571 – 15 November 1630) was a German astronomer, mathematician, astrologer, natural philosopher and writer on music. He is a key figure in the 17th-century Scientific Revolution, best known for his laws ...
. Shizuki's commentaries draw heavily from John Keill's, though Shizuki also generated his own ideas in his commentaries, and sought to reconcile Western philosophies of science with traditional Confucian metaphysical ideas. His best-known work was ''Rekisho Shinsho'', or ''New Treatise on Calendrical Phenomena'', which he completed in 1802 and which was heavily indebted to Keill's works, several of which Shizuki had already translated by that time. Several of the Japanese terms that Shizuki used in translating Newtonian mechanical ideas, including those for gravity and
centripetal force A centripetal force (from Latin ''centrum'', "center" and ''petere'', "to seek") is a force that makes a body follow a curved path. Its direction is always orthogonal to the motion of the body and towards the fixed point of the instantaneous c ...
, were adopted into the Japanese scientific lexicon and remain in common use.


References

*Steven L. Renshaw and Saori Ihara, "Shizuki, Tadao". In Virginia Trimble, et al., ed. ''Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers''. Springer, 2007, p. 1056.
Google Books link
{{DEFAULTSORT:Shizuki, Tadao 1760 births 1806 deaths 18th-century Japanese astronomers Japanese translators 18th-century Japanese translators 19th-century Japanese astronomers