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Episodes from the Early History of Mathematics

Episodes from the Early History of Mathematics

Episodes from the Early History of Mathematics

Asger Aaboe, Yale University, Connecticut
October 1997
This item is not supplied by Cambridge University Press in your region. Please contact Mathematical Association of America for availability.
Paperback
9780883856130
AUD$69.95
inc GST
Paperback

    Professor Aaboe gives here the reader a feeling for the universality of important mathematics, putting each chosen topic into its proper setting, thus bringing out the continuity and cumulative nature of mathematical knowledge. The material he selects is mathematically elementary, yet exhibits the depth that is characteristic of truly great thought patterns in all ages. The success of this exposition is due to the author's unique approach to his subject. He wisely refrains from attempting a general survey of mathematics in antiquity, but selects, instead, a few representative items that he can treat in detail. He describes Babylonian mathematics as revealed from cuneiform texts discovered only recently, as well as more familiar topics developed by the Greeks. Although each chapter can be read as a separate unit, there are many connecting threads. Aaboe stays as close to the original texts as is comfortable for a modern reader, and the bibliography enables the interested student to delve more deeply into any aspect of ancient mathematics that catches his or her fancy.

    • Illustrates the continuity of mathematics - how essential mathematics was created even in antiquity
    • Gives recently discovered examples from ancient texts
    • Shows universality of mathematics

    Product details

    October 1997
    Paperback
    9780883856130
    384 pages
    229 × 153 × 11 mm
    0.2kg
    This item is not supplied by Cambridge University Press in your region. Please contact Mathematical Association of America for availability.

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Babylonian mathematics
    • 2. Early Greek mathematics and Euclid's construction of the regular pentagon
    • 3. Three samples of Archimedean mathematics
    • 4. Ptolemy's construction of a trigonometric table.
      Author
    • Asger Aaboe , Yale University, Connecticut