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OverviewHe saved the mathematics that built the modern world. Almost no one knows his name.In 836 CE, in a desert city that worshipped the planets, a boy was born into the last community of pagan star-worshippers in the medieval world. His people - the Sabians of Harran - prayed to the Moon, calculated celestial orbits as acts of devotion, and kept alive an ancient tradition that the great monotheisms of the age had all but erased. That boy was Thabit ibn Qurra - and he would grow up to save the mathematical legacy of ancient Greece. Driven out of his own community for his unconventional views, Thabit made his way to Baghdad - the greatest city on earth - where he joined the most ambitious intellectual project of the medieval world: the translation of all available Greek scientific knowledge into Arabic. Over decades of patient, rigorous work, he translated the complete mathematical corpus of Archimedes - texts whose Greek originals would eventually be lost. Without Thabit, much of what Archimedes wrote would be gone forever. But Thabit was not only a translator. He discovered a theorem on amicable numbers. He measured the length of the solar year to within two seconds of the modern accepted value - in the ninth century, without telescopes. He revised Euclid's Elements, challenged the parallel postulate in ways that anticipated non-Euclidean geometry by a thousand years, and founded the science of statics with his work on the lever. He became royal astronomer to the Caliph of all Islam - a pagan heretic at the center of the Islamic world. The Star Keeper is the story of what it means to carry something irreplaceable across a dangerous distance. It is a story about outsiderness - and the particular kind of seeing that only outsiders can do. About the people history forgets and the knowledge they saved. About a man who never fully belonged anywhere, and who, precisely because he didn't belong, was able to give everything he knew to everyone who came after. Copernicus cited him. Medieval Europe built on his work. The calculus of Newton and Leibniz traces, through a long chain, to the Archimedes that Thabit preserved. And yet his name is almost unknown outside a narrow circle of historians of mathematics. This book gives him his place. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Narin HikmaPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.376kg ISBN: 9798259097407Pages: 278 Publication Date: 27 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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