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Home > Catalogue > The Transformation of Mathematics in the Early Mediterranean World
The Transformation of Mathematics in the Early Mediterranean World

Details

  • Page extent: 208 pages
  • Size: 216 x 138 mm
  • Weight: 0.408 kg

Library of Congress

  • Dewey number: 510/.94
  • Dewey version: 22
  • LC Classification: QA27.E85 N48 2004
  • LC Subject headings:
    • Mathematics--Europe--History

Library of Congress Record

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Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521829960 | ISBN-10: 0521829968)

  • Also available in Paperback
  • Published June 2004

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The transformation of mathematics from ancient Greece to the medieval Arab-speaking world is here approached by focusing on a single problem proposed by Archimedes and the many solutions offered. In this trajectory Reviel Netz follows the change in the task from solving a geometrical problem to its expression as an equation, still formulated geometrically, and then on to an algebraic problem, now handled by procedures that are more like rules of manipulation. From a practice of mathematics based on the localized solution (and grounded in the polemical practices of early Greek science) we see a transition to a practice of mathematics based on the systematic approach (and grounded in the deuteronomic practices of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages). With three chapters ranging chronologically from Hellenistic mathematics, through late Antiquity, to the medieval world, Reviel Netz offers an alternate interpretation of the historical journey of pre-modern mathematics.

• Offers a major reappraisal of the relationship between ancient and modern mathematics • Redraws the history of mathematics by bringing into focus the fundamental role of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages • Takes an innovative approach to the history of mathematics seen through scientific practice

Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1. The problem in the world of Archimedes; 2. From Archimedes to Eutocius; 3. From Archimedes to Khayyam; Conclusion; References; Index.

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