(2) Technological evolution | Making Sweet Music; Artefacts, as well as organisms, can evolve by natural selection. Economist, Feb 14, 2015
http://www.economist.com/news/sc ... ection-making-sweet
Quote:
“holes’ sound-amplification properties depend not on their areas but on the lengths of their peripheries.
“As is also the case with living organisms, mutation and selection seem to have arrived at an optimal result.
Note:
(a) "The instrument [violin] arrived at its modern form between the 16th and the 18th centuries, in the workshops of Cremona, a city in northern Italy that produced the Amati, Guarneri and Stradivari dynasties of luthiers."
(i) Cremona
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cremona
(ii) luthier (n)
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/luthier
(b) "The violin’s oldest European ancestors date from the tenth century. They were called 'fitheles,' a word derived from vitula, the Latin for heifer, the source of the gut for the strings. (The Latin word also eventually gave rise to 'violin'; 'fitheles,' meanwhile, became 'fiddle' in a process of linguistic speciation also akin to the biological sort.)"
(i)
(A) Latin English dictionary
vitula (noun feminine):
"1: a stringed musical instrument
2: calf, young cow"
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/vitula
(B) All English dictionaries tell you that violin is derived from viola. But only the following dictionary goes beyond.
viola (n): “ ‘tenor violin,’ 1797, from Italian viola, from Old Provençal viola, from Medieval Latin vitula ‘stringed instrument,’ perhaps from Vitula, Roman goddess of joy (see fiddle), or from related Latin verb vitulari ‘to exult, be joyful.’ Viola da gamba ‘bass viol’ (1724) is from Italian, literally ‘a viola for the leg’ (ie to hold between the legs).”
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=viola
(ii) fiddle (n; etymology): "VIOLIN"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fiddle
(c) "Intriguingly, intentional attempts in the 19th century to fiddle further with the f-holes’ designs actually served to make things worse, and did not endure."
fiddle (v):
"1 [NO OBJECT] Touch or fidget with something in a restless or nervous way <Lena fiddled with her cup>
1.1 Tinker with something in an attempt to make minor adjustments or improvements <he fiddled with the blind, trying to prevent the sun from shining in her eyes>"
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/fiddle |