<Galilei was lucky here>

   Galilei arrived at the best approximation with the information and
   tools available to him at the time.  No other system could be more
   appropriate to the (evolving) music of his time.  And he had a grasp of
   the physical realities of the lute, as well as taste.

   RA
     __________________________________________________________________

   From: [email protected]
   <[email protected]> on behalf of Rainer
   <[email protected]>
   Sent: Sunday, July 28, 2019 2:15 PM
   To: Lute net <[email protected]>
   Subject: [LUTE] "Equal" temoerament

   By the way, a few minutes ago I calculated the first terms of the
   continued fraction expansion of the twelfth root of 2 (which is
   infinite and non-periodic-the continued fraction and the decimal
   fraction :)).
   This gives in a precisely defined meaning the "best" approximations of
   2^(1/12) in rational numbers.
   The first approximations are:
   1       not very useful for tuning :)
   17/16   quite good
   18/17   Much better - Galilei was lucky here
   89/84   Too complicated already
   A stack of 12 semitones at 18/17 gives an octave of 1.985559952
   Best wishes,
   Rainer
   PS
   As far as I know the first who clearly states that the twelfth root of
   two should be used was Hendrik Stevin in his "Van de Spiegheling der
   Singconst" written before 1608 but not published until 1894.
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References

   1. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

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