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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Eleanor Robson (Senior Lecturer, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge and Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford) , Jacqueline Stedall (Extraordinary Junior Research Fellow, The Queen's College, Oxford)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.00cm , Height: 4.90cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 1.460kg ISBN: 9780199603190ISBN 10: 0199603197 Pages: 928 Publication Date: 10 February 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroductionEleanor Robson and Jacqueline Stedall: Geographies and Cultures: Global 1.1: G E R Lloyd: What was mathematics in the ancient world? Greek and Chinese perspectives 1.2: Gary Urton: Mathematics and authority: a case study in New and Old World accounting 1.3: Catherine Jami: Heavenly learning, statecraft, and scholarship: the Jesuits and their mathematics in China 1.4: Karen Parshall: The internationalization of mathematics in a world of nations, 1800-1960 Geographies and Cultures: Regional 2.1: Markus Asper: The two cultures of mathematics in ancient Greece 2.2: Jacqueline Stedall: Tracing mathematical networks in seventeenth-century England 2.3: Alexei Volkov: Mathematics and mathematics education in traditional Vietnam 2.4: Snezana Lawrence: A Balkan trilogy: mathematics in the Balkans before the First World War Geographies and Cultures: Local 3.1: Eleanor Robson: Mathematics education in an Old Babylonian scribal school 3.2: David Gilman Romano: The archaeology of mathematics in an ancient Greek city 3.3: Massimo Mazzotti: Engineering the Neapolitan state 3.4: David Aubin: Observatory mathematics in the nineteenth century People and Practices: Lives 4.1: Sonja Brentjes: Patronage of the mathematical sciences in Islamic societies 4.2: Kate Bennett: John Aubrey and the 'Lives of our English mathematical writers' 4.3: Irina and Dmitri Gouzévitch: Introducing mathematics, building an empire: Russia under Peter I 4.4: Mary Croarken: Human computers in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Britain People and Practices: Practices 5.1: Corinna Rossi: Mixing, building, and feeding: mathematics and technology in ancient Egypt 5.2: Brian Spooner and William Hanaway: Siyaq: numerical notation in the Persianate world 5.3: John Denniss: Learning arithmetic: textbooks and their users in England 1500-1900 5.4: Carrie Brezine: Algorithms and automation: mathematics and weaving People and Practices: Presentation 6.1: Stephen Chrisomalis: The cognitive and cultural foundations of numbers 6.2: Kim Plofker: Sanskrit mathematical verse 6.3: Volker Remmert: Antiquity, nobility, and utility: picturing the Early Modern mathematical sciences 6.4: Leo Corry: Writing the ultimate mathematical textbook: Nicolas Bourbaki's Eléments de mathématique Interactions and Interpretations: Intellectual 7.1: Christopher Cullen: People and numbers in early imperial China 7.2: Mark Thakkar: Mathematics in fourteenth-century theology 7.3: Benjamin Wardhaugh: Mathematics, music, and experiment in late seventeenth-century England 7.4: Jeremy Gray: Modernism in mathematics Interactions and Interpretations: Mathematical 8.1: Sabine Rommeveaux: The transmission of the Elements to the Latin West: three case studies 8.2: Niccolo Guicciardini: 'Gigantic implements of war': images of Newton as a mathematician 8.3: June Barrow-Green: From cascades to calculus: Rolle's Theorem 8.4: Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen: Abstraction and application: new contexts, new interpretations in twentieth-century mathematics Interactions and Interpretations: Historical 9.1: Annette Imhausen: Traditions and myths in the historiography of Egyptian mathematics 9.2: Ken Saito: Reading ancient Greek mathematics 9.3: Carol Bier: Number, shape, and the nature of space: thinking through Islamic art 9.4: Reinhard Siegmund-Schultze: The historiography and history of mathematics in the Third Reich About the contributors IndexReviewsWell written, well edited and well rounded... a healthy contribution to a burgeoning field of newly self-aware research. * British Journal for the History of Science * a splendid, something-for-everybody treasure-trove of interesting, informative, challenging, well written testaments to the variety and vigor of history of mathematics in our time * Historia Mathematica * Review from previous edition wonderful food for thought for any practitioner * Times Higher Education Supplement * Review from previous edition wonderful food for thought for any practitioner Times Higher Education Supplement a splendid, something-for-everybody treasure-trove of interesting, informative, challenging, well written testaments to the variety and vigor of history of mathematics in our time Historia Mathematica Well written, well edited and well rounded... a healthy contribution to a burgeoning field of newly self-aware research. British Journal for the History of Science "`Review from previous edition ""wonderful food for thought for any practitioner"" ' Times Higher Education Supplement `""a splendid, something-for-everybody treasure-trove of interesting, informative, challenging, well written testaments to the variety and vigor of history of mathematics in our time"" ' Historia Mathematica `""Well written, well edited and well rounded... a healthy contribution to a burgeoning field of newly self-aware research.""' British Journal for the History of Science" Author InformationEleanor Robson is Reader in Ancient Middle Eastern Science in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of Mesopotamian Mathematics, 2100-1600 BC (1999), Mathematics in Ancient Iraq: A Social History (2008), and many articles on the socio-intellectual history of the cuneiform world. She is co-director of an AHRC-funded project on the geography of knowledge in Assyria and Babylonia. Jacqueline Stedall is Senior Research Fellow in History of Mathematics at the Mathematical Institute, Oxford, and Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford. Her research focuses on European mathematics from the 16th to the 18th century, with a special interest in the development of algebra. Recent publications include Mathematics Emerging: A Sourcebook, 1540-1900 (2008) and The 'Magisteria magna' of Thomas Harriot (2008, with Janet Beery). She is also editor of the BSHM Bulletin, Journal of the British Society of the History of Mathematics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |