The term "logarithm" was coined in the early seventeenth century by the Scottish mathematician John Napier, whose seminal work Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio ("Description of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms") was published in 1614. This neologism was deliberately constructed from two ancient Greek components: "logos" (λόγος) and "arithmos" (ἀριθμός). The choice of these roots reflects Napier’s intention to capture the conceptual essence of logarithms as numbers expressing proportional relationships.
The Greek word "logos" carries a broad semantic range encompassing "word," "reason," "ratio," "proportion," and "discourse." It derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *leǵ-, which is reconstructed with meanings related to "to collect," "to gather," or "to speak." This root underlies a variety of Greek words connected to speech and reasoning, and through Latin and later English borrowings, it has generated an extensive vocabulary including terms such as "logic," "dialogue," "epilogue," "analogy," "catalogue," and the suffix "-ology." In the context of "logarithm," the sense
The second element, "arithmos," means "number" in Greek and is etymologically linked to the Proto-Indo-European root *h₂er-, which is thought to mean "to fit together" or "to join." This root metaphorically conveys the idea of assembling counted units into a whole, which aligns with the concept of number as a collection of discrete entities. The Greek "arithmos" is the source of the English word "arithmetic," and it has been inherited directly from ancient Greek into modern scientific and mathematical terminology.
Napier’s coinage "logarithm" thus literally signifies a "ratio number" or "proportional number," emphasizing the function of logarithms as quantities that express the proportional relationship between arithmetic and geometric progressions. This conceptual framing was innovative for its time. Napier’s logarithms were not initially defined as exponents to a fixed base, as is common in modern mathematics, but rather as numbers related by ratios, reflecting the original Greek meanings of the components.
It is important to distinguish "logarithm" from the superficially similar term "algorithm," which, despite phonetic resemblance, has an entirely different etymology. "Algorithm" derives from the Latinized name of the 9th-century Persian mathematician al-Khwārizmī, whose works introduced Hindu-Arabic numerals and algebraic methods to the Western world. This term entered European languages through Latin and medieval scholarship and is unrelated to the Greek roots of "logarithm."
In summary, the word "logarithm" is a learned coinage from 1614, formed from Greek "logos" and "arithmos," reflecting the mathematical concept of a number expressing proportional relationships. Its components trace back to well-attested Proto-Indo-European roots, with "logos" connected to notions of speech and ratio from *leǵ-, and "arithmos" related to counting and fitting together from *h₂er-. The term exemplifies the Renaissance practice of creating new scientific vocabulary by combining classical roots to articulate novel concepts, and it remains a cornerstone of mathematical language today.