![]() |
Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
Complete with sidebars offering recreational math brainteasers, this engrossing discussion of the evolution of mathematics will appeal to both scholars and lay readers with an interest in mathematics and its history.
In this sequel to his award-winning How Mathematics Happened,
physicist Peter S. Rudman explores the history of mathematics among
the Babylonians and Egyptians, showing how their scribes in the era
from 2000 to 1600 BCE used visualizations of how plane geometric
figures could be partitioned into squares, rectangles, and right
triangles to invent geometric algebra, even solving problems that
we now do by quadratic algebra. Using illustrations adapted from
both Babylonian cuneiform tablets and Egyptian hieroglyphic texts,
Rudman traces the evolution of mathematics from the metric
geometric algebra of Babylon and Egypt--which used numeric
quantities on diagrams as a means to work out problems--to the
nonmetric geometric algebra of Euclid (ca. 300 BCE). Thus, Rudman
traces the evolution of calculations of square roots from Egypt and
Babylon to India, and then to Pythagoras, Archimedes, and Ptolemy.
Surprisingly, the best calculation was by a Babylonian scribe who
calculated the square root of two to seven decimal-digit precision.
Rudman provocatively asks, and then interestingly conjectures, why
such a precise calculation was made in a mud-brick culture. From
his analysis of Babylonian geometric algebra, Rudman formulates a
"Babylonian Theorem," which he shows was used to derive the
Pythagorean Theorem, about a millennium before its purported
discovery by Pythagoras.
|
You may like...
Avengers 4: Endgame - 4K Ultra HD…
Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, …
Blu-ray disc
|