scholarly journals Three Notes on the Method of Analysis and Synthesis in its Ancient and (Arabic) Medieval Contexts

Studia Humana ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-11
Author(s):  
Hany Moubarez

AbstractMost historians and philosophers of philosophy and history of mathematics hold one interpretation or the other of the nature of method of analysis and synthesis in itself and in its historical development. In this paper, I am trying to prove – through three points – that, in fact, there were two understandings of that method in Greek mathematics and philosophy, and which were reflected in Arabic mathematical science and philosophy; this reflection is considered as proof also of this double nature of that method. Thus, we have to rethink the nature of Arabic philosophy systems.

Languages ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Dorien Nieuwenhuijsen

In this paper we will describe the historical development of the Spanish doublet ante-antes (‘before’) and explore the question whether a process of exaptation is involved (cf. Lass 1990). We will argue that the final –s of antes, that originally marked the adverbial status of the word, in the course of time had become a kind of morphological ‘junk’ (cf. Lass 1990) and, subsequently, could be exploited in order to encode the semantic opposition between temporal meaning on the one hand, and adversative meaning on the other hand. However, based on quantitative data we will show that the incipient semantic redistribution over the course of the 16th century rather suddenly collapsed, leading to a differentiation between the prepositional ante and adverbial antes.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 01037
Author(s):  
Serbay DURAN ◽  
Hüseyin SAMANCI

The aim of this study is to introduce Muḥammad ibn Mûsâ al-Khwârizmî and his works in terms of history of mathematics and mathematics education. Muḥammad ibn Musa al-Khwârizmî an Iraqi Muslim scholar and it is the first of the Muslim mathematicians who have contributed to this field by taking an important role in the progress of mathematics in his own period. He found the concept of Algorithm in mathematics. In some circles, he was given the nickname Abu Ilmi’l-Hâsûb (the father of the account). He carried out important studies in algebra, triangle, astronomy, geography and map drawing. Algebra has carried out systematic and logical studies on the solution of inequalities at second level in the development of the algebra. He with all these studies have contributed to mathematical science and today was a guide to the works done in the field of mathematics.


1954 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 24-25
Author(s):  
Margaret F. Willerding

Learning about the historical deveLopment of some phases of arithmetic not only serves as a basis for better understanding of our civilization but also aids in creating a favorable attitude and motivation for learning. Many teachers, because of their lack of knowledge, overlook the history of mathematics as a source of enrichment in teaching arithmetic. The development of our number system, of fractions, and units of measurement is as exciting to many pupils as the accounts of wars and other political conflicts in the struggle for freedom. In fact, modern society is very dependent upon number and quantity and the ways in which these are interpreted and used.


Nuncius ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 681-719
Author(s):  
LUCIANO CARBONE ◽  
FRANCO PALLADINO ◽  
ROMANO GATTO

Abstracttitle SUMMARY /title Federico Amodeo (1859-1946) was a mathematician and a historian of the mathematical sciences. As a mathematician he was "libero docente" at the University of Naples. His interests extended from projective to algebric geometry and his mathematical research was carried out for the most part from the mid-1880s until the end of the nineteenth century. As a historian he was active from the first years of the twentieth century until his death. In this capacity he was interested in mathematics, mathematicians and institutions in the Kingdom of Naples (later the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, from 1815), and also in the historical development of analytical and projective geometry and the history of conic sections. He held the chair in History of Mathematics in the University of Naples from 1905 until 1910, the year in which the chair was suppressed. Nonetheless he continued to teach this subject as a "libero docente" until 1923. Here we present the list of more than 1.300 writings, constituting his Correspondence, amongst which the letters of Castelnuovo, Pascal, Peano, Segre and Achille Sannia are of particular significance. We also present the complete list of his publications, reconstructed thanks to the consultation of incomplete printed bibliographies and a manuscript list.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-32
Author(s):  
Krishna Kanta Parajuli

South Asian region has made a glorious history of mathematics. This area is considered as fer- tile land for the birth of pioneer mathematicians who developed various mathematical ideas and creations. Among them, three innovative personalities are Bhaskaracarya, Gopal Pande and Bharati Krishna Tirthaji and their specific methods to find cube root are mainly focused on this study. The article is trying to explore the comparative study among the procedures they adopt. Gopal Pande disagrees with the Bhaskaracarya's verse. He used the unitary method against that method mentioned in Bhaskaracarya's famous book Lilavati to prove his procedures. However, the Vedic method by Tirthaji was not influenced by the other two except for minor cases. In the case of practicality and simplicity, the Vedic method is more practical and simpler to understand for all mathematical learners and teachers in comparison to the other two methods.


1936 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 209-219
Author(s):  
Raymond Clare Archibald

In a vice-presidential address before Section A of the American Association for the Advancement of Science just six years ago, I made a somewhat detailed survey1 of our knowledge of Egyptian and Babylonian Mathematics before the Greeks. This survey set forth considerable material not then found in any general history of mathematics. During the six years since that time announcements of new discoveries in connection with Egyptian mathematics have been comparatively insignificant, and all known documents have probably been more or less definitively studied and interpreted. But the case of Babylonian mathematics is entirely different; most extraordinary discoveries have been made concerning their knowledge and use of algebra four thousand years ago. So far as anything in print is concerned, nothing of the kind was suspected even as late as 1928. Most of these recent discoveries have been due to the brilliant and able young Austrian scholar Otto Neugebauer who now at the age of 36 has a truly remarkable record of achievement during the past decade. It was only in 1926 that he received his doctor's degree in mathematics at Göttingen, for an interesting piece of research in Egyptian mathematics; but very soon he had taken up the study of Babylonian cuneiform writing. He acquired a mastery of book and periodical literature of the past fifty years, dealing with Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian grammar, literature, metrology, and inscriptions; he discovered mathematical terminology, and translations the accuracy of which he thoroughly proved. He scoured museums of Europe and America for all possible mathematical texts, and translated and interpreted them. By 1929 he bad founded periodicals called Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der mathematik2 and from the first, the latter contained remarkable new information concerning Babylonian mathematics. A trip to Russia resulted in securing for the Quellen section, Struve's edition of the first complete publication of the Golenishchev mathematical papyrus of about 1850 B.C. The third and latest volume of the Quellen, appearing only about three months ago, is a monumental work by Neugebauer himself, the first part containing over five hundred pages of text, and the second part in large quarto format, with over 60 pages of text and about 70 plates. This work was designed to discuss most known texts in mathematics and mathematical astronomy in cuneiform writing. And thus we find that by far the largest number of such tablets is in the Museum of Antiquities at Istanbul, that the State Museum in Berlin made the next larger contribution, Yale University next, then the British Museum, and the University of Jena, followed by the University of Pennsylvania, where Hilprecht, some thirty years ago, published a work containing some mathematical tables. In the Museum of the Louvre are 16 tablets; and then there are less than 8 in each of the following: the Strasbourg University and Library, the Musec Royaux du Cinquantenaire in Brussels, the J. Pierpont Morgan Library Collection (temporarily deposited at Yale) the Royal On tario Museum of Archaeology at Toronto, the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, and the Böhl collection at Leyden. Most of the tablets thus referred to date from the period 2000 to 1200 B.C. It is a satisfaction to us to know that the composition of this wonderful reference work was in part made possible by The Rockefeller Foundation. Some two years ago it cooperated in enabling Neugebauer to transfer his work to the Mathematical Institute of the University of Copenhagen, after Nazi intolerance had rendered it impossible to preserve his self respect while pursuing the in tellectual life. This new position offered the opportunity for lecturing on the History of Ancient Mathematical Science. The first volume of these lectures3 on “Mathematics before the Greeks,” was published last year, and in it are many references to results, the exact setting of which are only found in his great source work referred to a moment ago. In these two works, then, we find not only a summing up of Neugebauer's wholly original work, but also a critical summary of the work of other scholars such as Frank, Gadd, Genouillac, Hilprecht, Lenormant, Rawlinson, Thureau-Dangin, Weidner, Zimmern, and many others.4 Hence my selection of material to be presented to you to-night will be mainly from these two works. Before turning to this it may not be wholly inappropriatp to interpolateoneremarkregarding Neugebauer's service to mathematics in general. Since 1931 his notable organizing ability has been partially occupied in editing and directing two other periodicals, (1) Zentralblatt fur Mathematik (of which 11 volumes have already appeared), and (2) Zentralblatt fur Mechanik, (3 volumes) a job which of itself would keep many a person fully employed. Mais, revenons à nos moutons!


1966 ◽  
Vol 59 (8) ◽  
pp. 755-770
Author(s):  
Peter A. Wursthorn

I saw David Brewster the other day, who received me kindly and spread out his bank draft for fifteen guineas like a man. He told me further that a translation was for certain to be set about and that I as certainly should have the first offer of it. The work is a thing I can work at if the “gea of life” be in me at all, and for that cause alone I propose to accept.


English Today ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 3-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
IRMA TAAVITSAINEN ◽  
PÄIVI PAHTA

THIS ARTICLE discusses present trends in the use of English in Finland, paying attention to the specific sociohistorical character of the country with its long history of Finnish-Swedish bilingualism. It has been argued that the other Nordic countries are developing from EFL to ESL countries; is Finland heading the same way? If so, at what stage is the process? We shall first give a brief overview of the theoretical background and of the historical development of the language situation in Finland. The present state of the use of English is outlined next, with the focus on education and on areas where the danger of domain loss is most imminent. At the end we discuss the ongoing changes in terms of the identity-forming function of language and the present diffusion in which the national language does not necessarily play a traditional role.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-204
Author(s):  
Georgy Levin ◽  

The article shows that all modern theories of analysis and synthesis, on one basis, are divided into classical and non-classical, and on the other, into realistic and anti-realistic. A realistic version of the classical theory, according to which analysis is a real or mental decomposition of the phenomena of the objective and subjective world into components, and synthesis is a real or mental combination of these components into a whole, is considered. The naive understanding of analysis, which includes in its task the cognition of the components of the object under study, and those relations that form it from these components, has been criticized. It is shown that the cognition of such relations is a task of synthesis. The history of the study of the problem of mental synthesis from Plato to modern nominalism is considered. Mental analysis and synthesis are compared with practical ones. Two stages of the history of practical analysis and synthesis are investigated — pre-scientific and scientific. The theories of analysis and synthesis, formed at these stages, are compared.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Estévez Cimadevila ◽  
Isaac López César

<p><em>The Galerie des Machines of 1889 is present in most books on the history of architecture. There are, however, certain aspects of this building that merit a more in-depth study. Other elements have been incorrectly described in current and contemporary publications about the building. The aim of this article is to examine the place this building occupies in the historical development of metal arch structures, its precedents and the influence it has exerted on later buildings of a similar structure. On the other hand, there have also been contradictions concerning the materials used in the erection of the structure and the reasons behind using them, as well as the exact span achieved. This article will unequivocally resolve these issues.</em></p>


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