Wikipedia:List of hoaxes on Wikipedia/Jean Moufot

Jean François Moufot (born March 13, 1784 - died April 4, 1842) was a French mathematician and philosopher.

Moufot was born in Normandy (France) in 1784, the son of a fisherman. He was a lonely child who read a great deal and liked to spend time by the sea. He began studying at the École Polytechnique in Paris in 1803 and attended some courses but never graduated. Instead, he focused on philosophy.

Moufot approached mathematics philosophically, probably influenced by the work of René Descartes. He was intrigued by Euclid's work and by the apparent simplicity of the first four postulates. It fascinated him that a complete science could be based on such ostensibly obvious theorems. Inspired by Euclid, he stated his famous two axioms.

The most notorious of Euclid's five postulates is the 'parallel postulate', which appears to be far more complicated than the other postulates. Like many other mathematicians Moufot attempted to prove it as a theorem from the other four. He eventually came to the conclusion that a consistent 'non-Euclidean' geometry was possible when the 'parallel postulate' was disregarded. Unfortunately he never published any of his work on this subject. About thirty years later people like the Russian Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky, the Hungarian Janos Bolyai and Karl Friedrich Gauss published their work, and they got the honour for their achievements in the discovery and development of non-Euclidean geometry.

Moufot married in 1805, but his wife died giving birth to a daughter several years later. His daughter grew up with her grandparents in Normandy. He died in Paris on April 4, 1842. In the 19th century a book about his life ('The fascinating world of J.F. Moufot') was published by an anonymous author.

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