The sea island mathematical manual
surveying and mathematics in ancient China
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Author
Contributions
- Liu, Hui, 3rd/4th cent. - Contributor
Publication
1992 - Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Pa, Pennsylvania
Language
English
Word Count
18,250 words, Guess
Page Count
73 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1535097M
- ISBN-100271007958
- OCLC Control Number23584159
- OCLC Control Numberisbn_2083776009956
- Library of Congress Control Number91013002
and 2 more
- Goodreads4756536
- LibraryThing52861
Classifications
- DDC526/.0931
- LCCTA527.C6 S94 1992
Description
An annotated translation and analysis of the Haidao Suanjing, a Chinese mathematical classic composed by Liu Hui in A.D. 263. All ancient societies practiced the art of land surveying. In fact, tradition tells us that geometry--land measure--had its origins in such surveying. However, an examination of early Western literature reveals few records concerning the practical uses of geometry and mathematics in the tasks of surveying. Recent research into the content and origins of early Chinese mathematics is beginning to reveal the existence of strong traditions and interest in the methodologies and applications of land survey. It is from these Chinese sources that a clearer picture of how people adapted mathematics and geometry to the needs of surveying emerges. The Haidao Suanjing, or Sea Island Mathematical Manual, is one of the "Ten Classics" of traditional Chinese mathematics, and its contents demonstrate the high standards of theoretical and mathematical sophistication present in early Chinese surveying theory. The Haidao established the mathematical procedures for much of East Asian surveying activity for the next one thousand years. The contents of the Haidao also testify to the ability of the Chinese to systematize mathematics and hint at the use of proof in Chinese mathematics, a concept usually associated with Greek mathematical thought. Frank Swetz provides an analysis of the Haidao's surveying problems. In particular, he details surveying techniques and undertakes a mathematical exposition of the Chinese chong cha solution procedures. The Haidao is a testimony to the ingenuity and skill of China's early surveyors and its author, Liu Hui. This study complements and extends the findings of Swetz's previous book, Was Pythagoras Chinese? An Examination of Right Triangle Theory in Ancient China.
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- The sea island mathematical manual: surveying and mathematics in ancient China
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