List of multiple discoveries
Historians and sociologists have remarked the occurrence, in science, of "multiple independent discovery". Robert K. Merton defined such "multiples" as instances in which similar discoveries are made by scientists working independently of each other. "Sometimes", writes Merton, "the discoveries are simultaneous or almost so; sometimes a scientist will make a new discovery which, unknown to him, somebody else has made years before."
Commonly cited examples of multiple independent discovery are the 17th-century independent formulation of calculus by Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz; the 18th-century discovery of oxygen by Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Joseph Priestley, Antoine Lavoisier and others; and the theory of the evolution of species, independently advanced in the 19th century by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace.
Multiple independent discovery, however, is not limited to such famous historic instances. Merton believed that it is multiple discoveries, rather than unique ones, that represent the common pattern in science.
Merton contrasted a "multiple" with a "singleton"—a discovery that has been made uniquely by a single scientist or group of scientists working together.
The distinction may blur as science becomes increasingly collaborative.
A distinction is drawn between a discovery and an invention, as discussed for example by Bolesław Prus. However, discoveries and inventions are inextricably related, in that discoveries lead to inventions, and inventions facilitate discoveries; and since the same phenomenon of multiplicity occurs in relation to both discoveries and inventions, this article lists both multiple discoveries and multiple inventions.
3rd century BCE
- Aristarchus of Samos was the first known originator of a heliocentric system. Such a system was formulated again some 18 centuries later by Nicolaus Copernicus.
13th century CE
- 1242first description of the function of pulmonary circulation, in Egypt, by Ibn al-Nafis. Later independently rediscovered by the Europeans Michael Servetus and William Harvey.
14th century
- 1370: Gresham's law: Nicole Oresme ; Nicolaus Copernicus ; Thomas Gresham ; Henry Dunning Macleod. Ancient references to the same concept include one in Aristophanes' comedy The Frogs, which compares bad politicians to bad coin.
16th century
- Galileo Galilei and Simon Stevin: heavy and light balls fall together.
- Galileo Galilei and Simon Stevin: Hydrostatic paradox.
- 1520: Scipione dal Ferro and Niccolò Tartaglia independently developed a method for solving cubic equations.
- Olbers' paradox was described by Thomas Digges in the 16th century, by Johannes Kepler in the 17th century, by Edmond Halley and by Jean-Philippe de Chéseaux in the 18th century, by Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers in the 19th century, and definitively by Lord Kelvin in the 20th century ; some aspects of Kelvin's argument had been anticipated in the poet and short-story writer Edgar Allan Poe's essay, Eureka: A Prose Poem, which also presaged by three-quarters of a century the Big Bang theory of the universe.
- 1596: Continental drift, in varying independent iterations, was proposed by Abraham Ortelius, Theodor Christoph Lilienthal, Alexander von Humboldt, Antonio Snider-Pellegrini, Alfred Russel Wallace, Charles Lyell, Franklin Coxworthy, Roberto Mantovani, William Henry Pickering, Frank Bursley Taylor, and Alfred Wegener. In addition, in 1885 Eduard Suess had proposed a supercontinent Gondwana and in 1893 the Tethys Ocean, assuming a land-bridge between the present continents submerged in the form of a geosyncline; and in 1895 John Perry had written a paper proposing that the Earth's interior was fluid, and disagreeing with Lord Kelvin on the age of the Earth.
17th century
- 1604: Oxygen was described by Michael Sendivogius; in 1771–72, by Carl Wilhelm Scheele; in 1774, by Joseph Priestley; and in 1777, as a chemical element, by Antoine Lavoisier.
- 1610: SunspotsThomas Harriot, Johannes and David Fabricius, Galileo Galilei, Christoph Scheiner.
- 1614: LogarithmsJohn Napier and Joost Bürgi.
- Analytic geometryRené Descartes, Pierre de Fermat.
- 1654: Problem of points solved by both Pierre de Fermat, Blaise Pascal, and Christiaan Huygens.
- CalculusIsaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
- 1662: Boyle's law is one of the gas laws and basis of derivation for the ideal gas law, which describes the relationship between the product pressure and volume within a closed system as constant when temperature remains at a fixed measure. The law was named for chemist and physicist Robert Boyle, who published the original law in 1662. The French physicist Edme Mariotte discovered the same law independently of Boyle in 1676.
- 1671: Newton–Raphson methodIsaac Newton and Joseph Raphson.
- 1683: DeterminantsSeki Takakazu and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
- 1696: Brachistochrone problem solved by Johann Bernoulli, Jakob Bernoulli, Isaac Newton, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Guillaume de l'Hôpital, and Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus. The problem was posed in 1696 by Johann Bernoulli, and its solutions were published next year.
- 1698: Steam engine: Patent granted to Thomas Savery in 1698. The invention has often been credited to Thomas Newcomen. Other early inventors have included Taqī al-Dīn, Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont, Giambattista della Porta, Giovanni Branca, Cosimo de' Medici, Evangelista Torricelli, Otto Von Guericke, Denis Papin, and many others.
18th century
- 1730: Stirling numbersJames Stirling and Masanobu Saka.
- 1740s: PlatinumAntonio de Ulloa and Charles Wood.
- 1745: Leyden JarEwald Georg von Kleist and Pieter van Musschenbroek.
- 1749: Lightning rodBenjamin Franklin and Prokop Diviš .
- 1756: Law of conservation of matterdiscovered by Mikhail Lomonosov, 1756; and independently by Antoine Lavoisier, 1778.
- 1773: OxygenCarl Wilhelm Scheele, Joseph Priestley. The term was coined by Antoine Lavoisier. Michael Sendivogius is claimed as an earlier discoverer of oxygen.
- 1783: Black-hole theoryJohn Michell, in a 1783 paper in The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, wrote: "If the semi-diameter of a sphere of the same density as the Sun in the proportion of five hundred to one, and by supposing light to be attracted by the same force in proportion to its with other bodies, all light emitted from such a body would be made to return towards it, by its own proper gravity." A few years later, a similar idea was suggested independently by Pierre-Simon Laplace.
- 1798: Malthusian catastropheThomas Robert Malthus, Hong Liangji.
- A method for measuring the specific heat of a soliddevised independently by Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford; and by Johan Wilcke, who published his discovery first.
- 1799: Complex planeGeometrical representation of complex numbers was discovered independently by Caspar Wessel, Jean-Robert Argand, John Warren, and Carl Friedrich Gauss.
19th century
- 1805: In a treatise written in 1805 and published in 1866, Carl Friedrich Gauss describes an efficient algorithm to compute the discrete Fourier transform. James W. Cooley and John W. Tukey reinvented a similar algorithm in 1965.
- 1817: CadmiumFriedrich Strohmeyer, K.S.L Hermann.
- 1817: Grotthuss–Draper law first proposed in 1817 by Theodor Grotthuss, then independently, in 1842, by John William Draper. The law states that only that light which is absorbed by a system can bring about a photochemical change.
- 1825: Bromine discovered by Carl Jacob Löwig; and independently, in 1826, by Antoine Jérôme Balard.
- 1828: BerylliumFriedrich Wöhler, A.A.B. Bussy.
- 1830: Non-Euclidean geometry Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky, János Bolyai ; preceded by Gauss c. 1805.
- 1831: Electromagnetic induction was discovered by Michael Faraday in England in 1831, and independently about the same time by Joseph Henry in the U.S.
- 1831: ChloroformSamuel Guthrie in the United States, and a few months later Eugène Soubeiran and Justus von Liebig, all of them using variations of the haloform reaction.
- Dandelin–Gräffe method, aka Lobachevsky methodan algorithm for finding multiple roots of a polynomial, developed independently by Germinal Pierre Dandelin, Karl Heinrich Gräffe, and Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky.
- 1837: Electrical telegraphCharles Wheatstone, Samuel F.B. Morse.
- First law of thermodynamicsIn the late 19th century, various scientists independently stated that energy and matter are persistent, although this was later to be disregarded under subatomic conditions. Hess's law, Julius Robert von Mayer, and James Joule were some of the first.
- 1846: Urbain Le Verrier and John Couch Adams, studying Uranus's orbit, independently proved that another, farther planet must exist. Neptune was found at the predicted moment and position.
- 1851: Bessemer ProcessThe process of removing impurities from steel on an industrial level using oxidation, developed in 1851 by American William Kelly and independently developed and patented in 1855 by eponymous Englishman Sir Henry Bessemer.
- 1858: The Möbius strip was discovered independently by the German astronomer–mathematician August Ferdinand Möbius and the German mathematician Johann Benedict Listing in 1858.
- 1858: Theory of evolution by natural selectionCharles Darwin, Alfred Russel Wallace papers published concurrently, 1858.
- 1862: 109P/Swift–Tuttle, the comet generating the Perseid meteor shower, was independently discovered by Lewis Swift on 16 July 1862, and by Horace Parnell Tuttle on 19 July 1862. The comet made a return appearance in 1992, when it was rediscovered by Japanese astronomer Tsuruhiko Kiuchi.
- 1868: French astronomer Pierre Janssen and English astronomer Norman Lockyer independently discovered evidence in the solar spectrum for a new element that Lockyer named "helium".
- 1869: Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev published his periodic table of chemical elements, and the following year Julius Lothar Meyer published his independently constructed version.
- 1873: Bolesław Prus propounded a "law of combination" describing the making of discoveries and inventions: "Any new discovery or invention is a combination of earlier discoveries and inventions, or rests on them."
- 1876: Oskar Hertwig and Hermann Fol independently described the entry of sperm into the egg and the subsequent fusion of the egg and sperm nuclei to form a single new nucleus.
- 1876: Elisha Gray and Alexander Graham Bell independently, on the same day, filed patents for invention of the telephone.
- 1877: Charles Cros described the principles of the phonograph that was, independently, constructed the following year by Thomas Edison.
- 1877: In England, Edward Sharpey-Schafer reported to the Royal Society his discovery of what eventually came to be called the nerve synapse; the Royal Society was skeptical of the unconventional notion of such spaces separating individual neurons, and asked him to withdraw his report. In 1888, in Spain, Santiago Ramón y Cajal, having used the Italian scientist Camillo Golgi's technique for staining nerve cells, published his discovery of the nerve synapse, which in 1889 finally gained acceptance and won Ramón y Cajal recognition as an, alongside Golgi – many say, the – "founder of modern neuroscience".
- 1879: British physicist-chemist Joseph Swan independently developed an incandescent light bulb at the same time as American inventor Thomas Edison was independently working on his incandescent light bulb. Swan's first successful electric light bulb and Edison's electric light bulb were both patented in 1879.
- Circa 1880: the integraph was invented independently by the British physicist Sir Charles Vernon Boys and by the Polish mathematician, inventor, and electrical engineer Bruno Abakanowicz. Abakanowicz's design was produced by the Swiss firm Coradi of Zurich.
- 1886: The Hall–Héroult process for inexpensively producing aluminum was independently discovered by the American engineer-inventor Charles Martin Hall and the French scientist Paul Héroult.
- In 1895 the Russian linguist Filipp Fortunatov, and in 1896 the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, independently formulated the sound law now known as the Fortunatov–de Saussure law.
- 1895: Adrenaline was discovered by the Polish physiologist Napoleon Cybulski. It was independently discovered in 1900 by the Japanese chemist Jōkichi Takamine and his assistant Keizo Uenaka.
- 1896: Two proofs of the prime number theorem were obtained independently by Jacques Hadamard and Charles de la Vallée-Poussin and appeared the same year.
- 1896: Radioactivity was discovered independently by Henri Becquerel and Silvanus Thompson.
- 1898: Thorium radioactivity was discovered independently by Gerhard Carl Schmidt and Marie Curie.
- Vector calculus was invented independently by the American, Josiah Willard Gibbs, and by the Englishman, Oliver Heaviside.