In 1614 C.E., a Scottish mathematician handed the world one of the most powerful labor-saving tools in the history of calculation. John Napier’s method of logarithms replaced long, error-prone multiplication with a far simpler operation — addition — and set off a quiet revolution in how human beings made sense of numbers at scale.
What the evidence shows
- John Napier logarithms: Napier introduced logarithms in his 1614 C.E. publication Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio, designed explicitly to simplify the multi-digit calculations that navigators, astronomers, and surveyors faced daily.
- Logarithm tables: By converting multiplication into addition — because the logarithm of a product equals the sum of the logarithms of its factors — printed tables let practitioners perform high-accuracy computations in a fraction of the previous time.
- Slide rule invention: Within a generation, the same principle gave rise to the slide rule, a mechanical calculator based on logarithmic scales that remained in everyday engineering use until electronic calculators arrived in the 1970s C.E.
A problem that had long been waiting
Before Napier, anyone who needed to multiply large numbers — an astronomer computing planetary positions, a ship’s navigator tracking celestial angles, a merchant reconciling accounts across currencies — had to work through each digit by hand. The margin for error was high, and the time cost was steep.
The core insight Napier developed over roughly 20 years was elegant: every positive number can be expressed as a power of some base. If you know those powers, multiplying two numbers becomes a matter of adding their exponents, then looking up what number that sum corresponds to. The hard arithmetic collapses into a lookup and a sum.
Napier was not working in isolation. Swiss mathematician Jost Bürgi developed a closely related system independently around the same time, and the mathematical infrastructure that made logarithms possible — including work on exponents and algebraic notation — had been accumulating across European and Islamic scholarship for centuries. Islamic mathematicians had long explored the relationship between arithmetic and geometric progressions, a conceptual ancestor of logarithmic thinking. Napier’s achievement was to codify these ideas into a usable, published system at a moment when science and navigation desperately needed it.
Rapid adoption across the sciences
The uptake was almost immediate. Astronomers embraced logarithm tables within years of the 1614 C.E. publication. The astronomer Johannes Kepler, who was working simultaneously on his laws of planetary motion, credited Napier’s tables with saving him enormous computational labor. Navigators used them to calculate positions at sea with new precision.
Henry Briggs, a mathematician at Gresham College in London, traveled to meet Napier and proposed switching the base to 10 — making tables even more practical for everyday decimal arithmetic. Napier, who was elderly and in poor health by then, agreed. Briggs went on to publish base-10 logarithm tables after Napier’s death in 1617 C.E., cementing what we now call common logarithms.
The mathematician Leonhard Euler later connected logarithms to the exponential function and introduced the number e as the base of natural logarithms — a formulation that became central to calculus, physics, and virtually every field of quantitative science. What Napier had introduced as a practical shortcut turned out to be something far deeper: a fundamental mathematical structure.
Lasting impact
Logarithms quietly underpin much of the modern world. The slide rule, derived directly from logarithmic scales, was the standard tool of engineers and scientists for over 300 years. Every aircraft, bridge, and rocket built before the electronic calculator era was designed using one.
Today, logarithms appear across science and daily life in ways most people never notice. The pH scale that measures acidity is logarithmic. So is the decibel scale for sound. So is the Richter scale for earthquakes. Algorithms for searching and sorting in computer science depend on logarithmic relationships. Information theory — the mathematical foundation of digital communication — is built on binary logarithms.
In neuroscience and psychology, Weber-Fechner’s law describes how human perception of brightness, loudness, and weight follows a roughly logarithmic pattern. Our senses, it turns out, work something like Napier’s tables — compressing a wide range of inputs into something manageable.
Public-key cryptography, which secures every online transaction made today, relies on the discrete logarithm problem — the computational difficulty of reversing an exponential function in finite groups. Napier could not have imagined it, but a thread runs directly from his 1614 C.E. publication to the encryption protecting HTTPS connections on the modern internet.
Blindspots and limits
Napier’s original logarithm system used a non-integer base and was unwieldy by modern standards — it required Briggs’s revision to become the practical tool history remembers. The emphasis on European figures like Napier and Euler also tends to obscure the longer lineage of algebraic and exponential thinking that stretched through medieval Islamic scholarship and Indian mathematics, contributions that rarely receive equal attention in standard accounts. Logarithm tables also introduced their own error risks: a misprint in a table could propagate silently through thousands of calculations, and errors in early published tables were a genuine problem for practitioners until systematic verification methods improved.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — History of logarithms
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the early modern era
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