Fleeting Footsteps: Tracing The Conception Of Arithmetic And Algebra In Ancient China

Front Cover
World Scientific, Oct 7, 1992 - 238 pages
The Hindu-Arabic numeral system (1, 2, 3, …) is one of mankind's greatest achievements and one of its most commonly used inventions. How did it originate? Those who have written about the numeral system have hypothesized that it originated in India; however, there is little evidence to support this claim.This book provides considerable evidence to show that the Hindu-Arabic numeral system, in spite of its commonly accepted name, has its origins in the Chinese rod numeral system. This system was in use in China from antiquity till the 16th and 17th century. It was used by officials, astronomers, traders and others to perform addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and other arithmetric operations, and also used by mathematicians to develop arithmetic and algebra.Sun Zi Suanjing (The Mathematical Classic of Sun Zi) written around 400 AD is the earliest existing work to have a description of the rod numerals and their operations. With this treatise as a central reference, the first part of the book discusses the development of arithmetric and the beginnings of algebra in ancient China and, on the basis of this knowledge, advances the thesis that the Hindu-Arabic numeral system has its origins in the rod numeral system. Part Two gives a complete translation of Sun Zi Suanjing.
 

Contents

The Sun Zi Suanjing The Mathematical Classic of Sun Zi
3
Numbers and Numerals
11
The Fundamental Operations of Arithmetic
29
The Common Fraction
53
On Extracting Roots of Numbers
65
Tables of Measures
83
The Various Problems
89
Socioeconomic Aspects in Sun Zis China
127
Did the HinduArabic Numeral System have its Origins in the Rod Numeral System?
133
Preface
151
Chapter 1
153
Chapter 2
163
Chapter 3
173
Bibliography
187
Index
195

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information