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History of mathematics - Complex numbers | A Wisdom Archive on History of mathematics - Complex numbers |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers A selection of articles related to History of mathematics - Complex numbers |  |
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History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes
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ARTICLES RELATED TO History of mathematics - Complex numbers |  |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Complex numbersWhen the complex numbers were introduced, there were many who argued that they were imaginary constructs to solve the cubic, and that they should not be considered 'real'. This is the origin of the terms imaginary and real for the numbers. However, mathematicians found the new world of complex numbers to be elegant and compelling. To represent a solution to the equation shown above (i.e., X * X + 1 = 0) mathematicians eventually settled on the letter i. However, in the early 19th century, one fu ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Complex numbers |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Complex numbersWhen the complex numbers were introduced, there were many who argued that they were imaginary constructs to solve the cubic, and that they should not be considered 'real'. This is the origin of the terms imaginary and real for the numbers. However, mathematicians found the new world of complex numbers to be elegant and compelling. To represent a solution to the equation shown above (i.e., X * X + 1 = 0) mathematicians eventually settled on the letter i. However, in the early 19th century, one fu ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Complex numbers |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistoryLong before the earliest written records, there are drawings that indicate a knowledge of mathematics and of measurement of time based on the stars. For example, paleontologists have discovered ochre rocks in a cave in South Africa adorned with scratched geometric patterns dating back more than 70,000 years [1]. Also prehistoric artifacts discovered in Africa and France, dated between 35000 BC and 20000 BC, indicate early attempts to quantify time Evidence exists that early counting involved women who kept records of their monthly biological ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistoryLong before the earliest written records, there are drawings that indicate a knowledge of mathematics and of measurement of time based on the stars. For example, paleontologists have discovered ochre rocks in a cave in South Africa adorned with scratched geometric patterns dating back more than 70,000 years [1]. Also prehistoric artifacts discovered in Africa and France, dated between 35000 BC and 20000 BC, indicate early attempts to quantify time Evidence exists that early counting involved women who kept records of their monthly biological ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500The Islamic Caliphate (Islamic empire) established across the Middle East, North Africa, and in parts of India in the 8th century preserved and translated much of the Greek mathematics which was at that time largely forgotten in Europe. Indian mathematics, and the introduction of the Hindu-Arabic numerals, also had a major influence on Islamic mathematics. Like the Hindu mathematicians, Islamic mathematicians were especially interested in astronomy. The works of Brahmagupta were translated into Arabic circa 766.
Al-Khwarizmi, the 9th ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500 |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600From 200 BC, mathematicians in India began studying mathematics for the sole purpose of science, starting with Jaina mathematicians between 200 BC and AD 400. They discovered transfinite numbers, set theory, logarithms, fundamental laws of indices, cubic equations, quartic equations, sequences and progressions, permutations and combinations, squaring and extracting square roots, and finite and infinite powers. Discoveries written in the Bakshali Manuscript include solutions of linear equations with upto five unknowns, the solution of ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600 |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600In Europe at the dawn of the Renaissance, most of what is now called school mathematics -- addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and geometry -- was known to educated people, though the notation was cumbersome: Roman numerals and words were used, but no symbols: no plus sign, no equal sign, no zero, and no use of x as an unknown. Almost all of the mathematics now taught in college had yet to be d ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600 |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - 18th centuryAs we have seen, knowledge of the natural numbers, 1, 2, 3,..., as preserved in monolithic structures, is older then any surviving written text. The earliest civilizations, in Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, and China, knew arithmetic.
One way to view the development of the various number systems of modern mathematics is to see new numbers invented to answer questions about arithmetic performed on older numbers. In prehistoric times, fractions answered the question: what number, when multiplied by 3, gives the answer 1. In India and China, ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - 18th century |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - 17th centuryThe 17th century saw an unprecedented explosion of mathematical and scientific ideas that not only fascinated philosophers but had industrial applications that began to make major changes in the way people lived.
Copernicus, a Pole, had written that planets orbit the Sun. Galileo, an Italian, observed the moons of Jupiter in orbit about that planet, using a telescope based on a toy imported from Holland. Tycho Brahe, a Dane, had gathered an enormous quantity of mathematical data describing the positions of the planets in the sky. His ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - 17th century |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200In China, in 212 BC, the Emperor Qin Shi Huang (Shi Huang-ti) commanded that all books be burned. While this order was not universally obeyed, it means that little is known with certainty about ancient Chinese mathematics. Another problem is that the Chinese wrote on bamboo, a perishable medium.
Dating from the Shang period (1500 BC - 1027 BC), the earliest extant Chinese mathematics consists of numbers scratched on tortoise shell. These numbers use a decimal system, so that the number 123 is written (from top to bottom) as the symbol ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200 |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notesThe Maya calendar utilized a base-20 number system which included the 'number' zero (also see Maya numerals).
In China, Zu Chongzhi (5th century) of the Southern and Northern Dynasties was the first person to calculate the value of Pi to seven decimal places.
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See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BCThe earliest known mathematics in ancient India dates back to 3000 BC with the Indus Valley civilization. After its collapse in 1700 BC however, writing was absent in South Asia for a long period. There is considerable controversy regarding the dates when writing was re-developed in India and when the Brahmi script was developed.[5] Some scholars, such as Georg Bühler, date the Brahmi script as early as the 8th century BC, others from the Maurya dynasty in the 4th century BC. Some evidence dates it to 600 BC (see Brāhmī), while some schol ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BCThere is considerable controversy about the dates of Indian writing during the historical period (that is, writing more recent than that of the Indus Valley Civilization) (see http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucgadkw/position/salomon.html). Some scholars, such as Georg Bühler, date Indian writing as early as the 8th century BC, others from the Maurya dynasty in the 4th century BC. If the earlier date is correct, it is possible that Pythagoras traveled to India and learned mathematics there, as some claim. If the later date is correct, then Indian math ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BCThe oldest mathematics text discovered so far is the Moscow papyrus, which is an Egyptian Middle Kingdom papyrus dated circa 2050 BC - 1800 BC. Like many ancient mathematical texts, it consists of what are today called "word problems" or "story problems", which were apparently intended as entertainment. One problem is considered to be of particular importance because it gives a method for finding the volume of a pyramid: "If you are told: A truncated pyramid of 6 for the vertical height by 4 on the base by 2 on the top. You are to square thi ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BCThe dates of Greek mathematics are more certain than the dates of earlier mathematical writing, since a large number of chronologies exist that, overlapping, record events year by year up to the present day. Even so, many dates are uncertain; but the doubt is a matter of decades rather than centuries.
Greek mathematics is characterized by its originality, its depth, its abstraction, and its reliance on logic. The Greeks were the first to discover irrational numbers (due to the Pythagoreans), Eudoxus's method of exhaustion, and the Sie ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200The Islamic Empire established across the Middle East, North Africa, and in parts of India in the 8th century preserved and translated much of the Greek mathematics which was at that time largely forgotten in Europe. Indian mathematics, and the introduction of the Hindu-Arabic numerals, also had a major influence on Islamic mathematics. Like the Hindu mathematicians, Islamic mathematicians were especially interested in astronomy. The works of Brahmagupta were translated into Arabic circa 766.
Al-Khwarizmi, the 9th century Persian astr ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200 |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BCThe oldest mathematics text discovered so far is the Moscow papyrus, which is an Egyptian Middle Kingdom papyrus dated circa 2050 BC - 1800 BC. Like many ancient mathematical texts, it consists of what are today called "word problems" or "story problems", which were apparently intended as entertainment. One problem is considered to be of particular importance because it gives a method for finding the volume of a pyramid: "If you are told: A truncated pyramid of 6 for the vertical height by 4 on the base by 2 on the top. You are to square thi ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notesThe Maya calendar utilized a base-20 number system which included the 'number' zero (also see Maya numerals).
In China, Zu Chongzhi (5th century) of the Southern and Northern Dynasties was the first person to calculate the value of Pi to seven decimal places.
The Mesopotamian cuneiform tablet Plimpton 232 records a number of Pythagorean triplets (3,4,5) (5,12,13). ..., dated 1900 BC, possi ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Early written mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - India 800 BC - 300 BC, History of mathematics - Greece and Hellenistic mathematics 400 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Arab and Persian mathematics 650 - 1200, History of mathematics - Developing the concept of number through equations, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes |
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 |  |  | History of mathematics - Complex numbers: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BCAlthough the earliest Greek texts on mathematics were written after the Hellenistic period, many of these are considered to be copies of works written during, and some before, the Hellenistic period. Nevertheless, the dates of Greek mathematics are more certain than the dates of earlier mathematical writing, since a large number of chronologies exist that, overlapping, record events year by year up to the present day. Even so, many dates are uncertain; but the doubt is a matter of decades rather than centuries.
Greek mathematics is th ...
See also:History of mathematics, History of mathematics - Mathematics in prehistory, History of mathematics - Egyptian and Babylonian mathematics 2000 BC - 600 BC, History of mathematics - Ancient Indian mathematics 800 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC, History of mathematics - Chinese mathematics 200 BC - AD 1200, History of mathematics - Classical Indian mathematics 200 BC - AD 1600, History of mathematics - Arabic and Persian mathematics 650 - 1500, History of mathematics - European Renaissance mathematics 1200 - 1600, History of mathematics - 17th century, History of mathematics - 18th century, History of mathematics - Complex numbers, History of mathematics - Miscellaneous historical notes, History of mathematics - Notes Read more here: » History of mathematics: Encyclopedia II - History of mathematics - Greek and Hellenistic mathematics 550 BC - 200 BC |
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