scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Greek mathematics

About: Greek mathematics is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 322 publications have been published within this topic receiving 8549 citations.


Papers
More filters
Book
01 Jan 1956
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the history of modern mathematics from the origins to the present day, including the development of modern algebra, geometry, and modern physics.
Abstract: Origins. Egypt. Mesopotamia. Ionia and the Pythagoreans. The Heroic Age. The Age of Plato and Aristotle. Euclid of Alexandria. Archimedes of Syracuse. Apollonius of Perga. Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration. Revival and Decline of Greek Mathematics. China and India. The Arabic Hegemony. Europe in the Middle Ages. The Renaissance. Prelude to Modern Mathematics. The Time of Fermat and Descartes. A Transitional Period. Newton and Leibniz. The Bernoulli Era. The Age of Euler. Mathematicians of the French Revolution. The Time of Gauss and Cauchy. Geometry. Analysis. Algebra. Poincar? and Hilbert. Aspects of the Twentieth Century. References. General Bibliography. Appendix. Index.

977 citations

Book
01 Jan 1921
TL;DR: A text which looks at the history of Greek mathematics is presented in this article, a subject on which the author established a special authority by his succession of works on Diophantus, Apolonius of Perga, Archimedes, Euclid and Aristarchus.
Abstract: A text which looks at the history of Greek mathematics - a subject on which the author established a special authority by his succession of works on Diophantus, Apolonius of Perga, Archimedes, Euclid and Aristarchus

612 citations

Book
01 Jan 1953
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a Chronological Table of Cultural Connections: The Hunters of the Savanna (The Stone Age), Numeral Systems, the Agricultural Revolution (The Cradles of Civilization). Babylonian and Egyptian Mathematics.
Abstract: Before the 17th Century. Part I: Cultural Connections: The Hunters of the Savanna (The Stone Age). Numeral Systems. Part II: Cultural Connections: The Agricultural Revolution (The Cradles of Civilization). Babylonian and Egyptian Mathematics. Part III: Cultural Connections: The Philosophers of the Agora (Hellenic Greece). Phytagorean Mathematics. Duplication, Trisection, And Quadrature. Part IV: Cultural Connections: The Oikoumene (The Persian Empire, Hellenistic Greece, And the Roman Empire). Euclid and His Elements. Greek Mathematics After Euclid. Part V: Cultural Connections: The Asian Empires (China, India, And the Rise of Islam). Chinese, Hindu, And Arabian Mathematics. Part VI: Cultural Connections: Serfs, Lords, And Popes (The European Middle Ages). European Mathematics, 500 to 1600. The 17th Century and After. Part VII: Cultural Connections: Puritans and Sea Dogs (The Expansion of Europe). The Dawn of Modern Mathematics. Analytic Geometry and Other Precalculus Developments. The Calculus and Related Concepts. Part VIII: Cultural Connections: The Revolt of the Middle Class (The 18th Century in Europe and America). The 18th Century and the Exploitation of the Calculus. Part IX: Cultural Connections (The Industrial Revolution (The 19th Century). The Early 19th Century and the Liberation of Geometry and Algebra. The Late 19th Century and the Arithmetization of Analysis. Part X: Cultural Connections: The Atom and the Spinnnig Wheel (The 20th Century). Transition Into the 20th Century. General Bibliography. A Chronological Table. Answers and Suggestions for the Solutions of the Problem Studies. Index.

487 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the early history of mathematics in the Middle Ages and the early modern world, focusing on the use of algebra and number theory in the Eighteenth and Seventeenth centuries.
Abstract: Part I. Ancient Mathematics 1. Egypt and Mesopotamia 1.1 Egypt 1.2 Mesopotamia 2. The Beginnings of Mathematics in Greece 2.1 The Earliest Greek Mathematics 2.2 The Time of Plato 2.3 Aristotle 3. Euclid 3.1 Introduction to the Elements 3.2 Book I and the Pythagorean Theorem 3.3 Book II and Geometric Algebra 3.4 Circles and the Pentagon 3.5 Ratio and Proportion 3.6 Number Theory 3.7 Irrational Magnitudes 3.8 Solid Geometry and the Method of Exhaustion 3.9 Euclid's Data 4. Archimedes and Apollonius 4.1 Archimedes and Physics 4.2 Archimedes and Numerical Calculations 4.3 Archimedes and Geometry 4.4 Conic Sections Before Apollonius 4.5 The Conics of Apollonius 5. Mathematical Methods in Hellenistic Times 5.1 Astronomy Before Ptolemy 5.2 Ptolemy and The Almagest 5.3 Practical Mathematics 6. The Final Chapter of Greek Mathematics 6.1 Nichomachus and Elementary Number Theory 6.2 Diophantus and Greek Algebra 6.3 Pappus and Analysis Part II. Medieval Mathematics 7. Ancient and Medieval China 7.1 Introduction to Mathematics in China 7.2 Calculations 7.3 Geometry 7.4 Solving Equations 7.5 Indeterminate Analysis 7.6 Transmission to and from China 8. Ancient and Medieval India 8.1 Introduction to Mathematics in India 8.2 Calculations 8.3 Geometry 8.4 Equation Solving 8.5 Indeterminate Analysis 8.6 Combinatorics 8.7 Trigonometry 8.8 Transmission to and from India 9. The Mathematics of Islam 9.1 Introduction to Mathematics in Islam 9.2 Decimal Arithmetic 9.3 Algebra 9.4 Combinatorics 9.5 Geometry 9.6 Trigonometry 9.7 Transmission of Islamic Mathematics 10. Medieval Europe 10.1 Introduction to the Mathematics of Medieval Europe 10.2 Geometry and Trigonometry 10.3 Combinatorics 10.4 Medieval Algebra 10.5 The Mathematics of Kinematics 11. Mathematics Elsewhere 11.1 Mathematics at the Turn of the Fourteenth Century 11.2 Mathematics in America, Africa, and the Pacific Part III. Early Modern Mathematics 12. Algebra in the Renaissance 12.1 The Italian Abacists 12.2 Algebra in France, Germany, England, and Portugal 12.3 The Solution of the Cubic Equation 12.4 Viete, Algebraic Symbolism, and Analysis 12.5 Simon Stevin and Decimal Analysis 13. Mathematical Methods in the Renaissance 13.1 Perspective 13.2 Navigation and Geography 13.3 Astronomy and Trigonometry 13.4 Logarithms 13.5 Kinematics 14. Geometry, Algebra and Probability in the Seventeenth Century 14.1 The Theory of Equations 14.2 Analytic Geometry 14.3 Elementary Probability 14.4 Number Theory 14.5 Projective Geometry 15. The Beginnings of Calculus 15.1 Tangents and Extrema 15.2 Areas and Volumes 15.3 Rectification of Curves and the Fundamental Theorem 16. Newton and Leibniz 16.1 Isaac Newton 16.2 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 16.3 First Calculus Texts Part IV. Modern Mathematics 17. Analysis in the Eighteenth Century 17.1 Differential Equations 17.2 The Calculus of Several Variables 17.3 Calculus Texts 17.4 The Foundations of Calculus 18. Probability and Statistics in the Eighteenth Century 18.1 Theoretical Probability 18.2 Statistical Inference 18.3 Applications of Probability 19. Algebra and Number Theory in the Eighteenth Century 19.1 Algebra Texts 19.2 Advances in the Theory of Equations 19.3 Number Theory 19.4 Mathematics in the Americas 20. Geometry in the Eighteenth Century 20.1 Clairaut and the Elements of Geometry 20.2 The Parallel Postulate 20.3 Analytic and Differential Geometry 20.4 The Beginnings of Topology 20.5 The French Revolution and Mathematics Education 21. Algebra and Number Theory in the Nineteenth Century 21.1 Number Theory 21.2 Solving Algebraic Equations 21.3 Symbolic Algebra 21.4 Matrices and Systems of Linear Equations 21.5 Groups and Fields - The Beginning of Structure 22. Analysis in the Nineteenth Century 22.1 Rigor in Analysis 22.2 The Arithmetization of Analysis 22.3 Complex Analysis 22.4 Vector Analysis 23. Probability and Statistics in the Nineteenth Century 23.1 The Method of Least Squares and Probability Distributions 23.2 Statistics and the Social Sciences 23.3 Statistical Graphs 24. Geometry in the Nineteenth Century 24.1 Differential Geometry 24.2 Non-Euclidean Geometry 24.3 Projective Geometry 24.4 Graph Theory and the Four Color Problem 24.5 Geometry in N Dimensions 24.6 The Foundations of Geometry 25. Aspects of the Twentieth Century 25.1 Set Theory: Problems and Paradoxes 25.2 Topology 25.3 New Ideas in Algebra 25.4 The Statistical Revolution 25.5 Computers and Applications 25.6 Old Questions Answered

329 citations

Book
01 Jan 1972
TL;DR: The Pythagorean number theory of the Pythagoreans according to the Platonic theory of ideal numbers is discussed in this article, where the authors also discuss the role of number symbolism in the development of Greek mathematics.
Abstract: * Introduction I. Platonic and Pythagorean Number Theory * The Platonic Theory of Ideal Numbers * The Philosophy of the Pythagoreans according to Aristotle * The Later Non-Aristotelian Tradition and Its Sources, Speusippus, Xenocrates, and Heraclides Ponticus * Pythagoreanism in Plato and the Origin in Platonism of the Pythagorean Tradition II. Pythagoras in the Earliest Tradition * Source Problems * Historical Background * Metempsychosis and "Shamanism" Acusmata Acusmatici and Mat hematici * Early Evidence for Pythagoras as a Scientist? III. Philolaus * The Special Position of Philolaus' Book in the Pythagorean Tradition * The Spurious and the Genuine in the Philolaus Fragments * Reflections of Pythagorean Philosophy in the Fifth Century B.C.? IV. Astronomy and Pythagoreanism * The Structure of the World and the Planetary System * The Theory of Planetary Movements * The Cosmos of Philolaus * Harmony of the Spheres and Astral Immortality V. Pythagorean Musical Theory * Speculation, Experimentation, and Fiction * Number Symbolism and Calculation of Proportions in Philolaus VI. Pythagorean Number Theory and Greek Mathematics * Did the Pythagoreans Lay the Foundations of Greek Mathematics? * Pythagorean Arithmetic * Pythagorean Geometry and Mathematical Secrets * Number and Cosmos * Abbreviations * Bibliography * Greek Words Discussed * Index of Passages * General Index

303 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Philosophy of science
15.4K papers, 361.5K citations
70% related
Metaphysics
14.8K papers, 235.4K citations
68% related
Philosophy education
11K papers, 227.6K citations
68% related
Reform mathematics
10.9K papers, 240.2K citations
68% related
Contemporary philosophy
11.1K papers, 373.9K citations
67% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20214
20207
20195
20188
20175
201617