The ancient cultures of Egypt, Mesopotamia,
and Greece created the basic language of number and calculation. When ancient
Greece fell into decline, mathematical progress stopped. But that was in the
West.
In the East, Mathematics would reach
dynamic new heights. But in the West, much of this mathematical heritage has
been forgotten or shaded from view.
The Great Wall of China, the vast,
defensive wall that was built to protect China's growing empire. This wall is an
amazing feat of engineering built over rough and high countryside. As soon as
they started building, the ancient Chinese realized they had to make
calculations about distances, angles of elevation and amounts of material used.
This inspired some very clever mathematicians to help build Imperial China. At
the heart of ancient Chinese Mathematics was an incredibly simple number system
that laid the foundations for the way we count today.
Like the Chinese, the Indians had discovered
the mathematical benefits of the decimal place-value system. It has been
suggested that the Indians learned the system from Chinese merchants traveling
in India with their counting rods. We may never know how the Indians came up
with their number system, but we do know that they refined and perfected it, creating
the ancestors for the nine numerals used across the world now.
The Indian system of counting was one of
the greatest intellectual innovations; developing into the closest thing, we
could call a universal language. However, there was one number missing, and it
was the Indians who introduced it to the world.
Muhammad Al-Khwarizmi.
Have you heard about him before? Was his
name published in any Mathematics textbook? Do the grade schoolers or college
students know about him and what he had contributed to Mathematics? Neither do
I. Like what I said earlier, much of the discoveries in the East were forgotten
or were hidden from view.
Al-Khwarizmi was an exceptional mathematician
who was responsible for introducing two key mathematical concepts to the West. In
fact, these numbers were known as the Hindu-Arabic numerals. These numbers –
one to nine and zero - are the ones we use today all over the world. But
Al-Khwarizmi was to create a whole new mathematical language. It was called Algebra
and was named after the title of his book Al-jabr W'al-muqabala, or Calculation
by restoration or reduction. Algebra is the grammar that underlies the way that
numbers work. It was a huge breakthrough. He developed systematic ways to be
able to analyze problems so that the solutions would work whatever the numbers
that you took. This language is being used across the mathematical world today.
Omar Khayyam took up the challenge of cracking
the problem of the cubic. Unbelievably, Khayyam was a poet. He was the author
of the great epic poem “Rubaiyat”. Khayyam's major mathematical work was
devoted to finding the general method to solve all cubic equations.
Fibonacci promoted the new number
system, demonstrating how simple it was, compared to the Roman numerals that
were in use across Europe. Calculations were far easier, a fact that had huge
consequences for anyone dealing with numbers -pretty much everyone, from mathematicians
to merchants.
On how the ancient Chinese engineered the Great Wall of China explains why their descendants are so good at every field of mathematics (e.g. business and trade).
ReplyDeleteWhy do you think many of us know so little about the Eastern contribution to Mathematics?
ReplyDeleteyep, the east did contribute a lot to math.. they helped a lot in the development in the modern world. i like how you brought up the names of the mathematician then asking if we've heard about them before. i honestly didn't know about Muhammad Al-Khwarizmi before i watched the movie xD.. the movie really helps to change your view in math :)
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