Like every invention, there is dispute as to who invented/discovered it first. Usually, well-known figures are credited with what had previously been a long discussion. The problem of tuning was the latest news in Bach's time, and Bach, being the accepted spokesman of the time, made pronouncement which over time have become attributed to him.b0b wrote:Bach didn't invent equal temperament, Alan, nor was The Well-Tempered Clavier written for it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_temp ... ly_history
The problem arises because no-one has come up with a better way of putting music down on paper. I think that the error is the naming of notes. The notes ABCDEFG were so named because they were the notes in the Amin. scale. They also happened to be the notes in the Cmaj. scale and in several other modes, which we don't use nowadays.
When we started writing in other keys the mistake was to refer back to C/Amin. What they should have said at the time, but they didn't have the technological knowledge, was to take any key, and from that extrapolate the notes. In other words, write everything in C and then assume you were putting some sort of capo' on to get to the other keys. The mistake was writing everything in C and then adding sharps and flats to the key signature, which never worked. You cannot write music in C (which is the way the lines are described) add a few sharps and flats and come up with another key. All the notes described in the key signature are in the key of C/Amin. In every other key they are inaccurate.