Daniel da Silva (16 May 1814 – 6 October 1878) was a Portuguese mathematician and marine officer.
Born in Lisbon, he completed his first studies at the Portuguese Royal Naval Academy, and then proceeded his education in Mathematics at the University of Coimbra where he became a doctor.
[1] He was a pioneer in the development of theory of couple in Classical mechanics[1] and in Actuarial science.
At the age of 15, he enrolled in Portugal's Royal Navy Academy, where he took courses on Mathematics and Physics.
In 1832 he entered in Portugal's Royal Academy of Marine Guards, and was appointed Navy Officer in 1833.
After finishing his degree in the Royal Academy in 1835, he enrolled in the Mathematics Faculty of University of Coimbra.
[1][3] After finishing his studies in Coimbra, Daniel da Silva returned to Lisbon to follow a career in Navy.
In 1845, the Portugal's Royal Academy of Marine Guards was transformed in the Navy School and Daniel was appointed as a substitute teacher there.
[3] The inclusion–exclusion principle was stated and proved for the first time by Daniel da Silva in his memoir Propriedades geraes e resolução das congruências binomias: Introducção ao estudo da theoria dos numeros (General properties and direct resolution of binomial congruences), presented to the Lisbon Academy of Sciences in 1852 and published in 1854.
In this memory, Daniel da Silva also proved the following generalization of Euler's theorem: let
Another important publication of Daniel da Silva is Memória sobre a rotação das forças em torno dos pontos de aplicação (Memoir on the rotation of forces about their points of application) on classical mechanics, presented in 1850 to Lisbon Academy of Sciences.
In this work, Daniel da Silva worked on the problem of the equilibrium of a system of forces turning around their points of application, but maintaining their relative angles while rotating.