A Remarkable Collection of Babylonian Mathematical TextsManuscripts in the Schoyen Collection - Cuneiform Texts ISources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciencesby Joran FribergSpringer, 2007, 9780387345437, Large Hardcover without Dust Jacket, (9 x 11 inches) Fine condition, no marks, no underlining, no highlighting, like new condition. 533 pages. |
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This new text from Joran Friberg, the leading expert on Babylonian mathematics, presents 120 previously unpublished mathematical clay tablets from the Norwegian Schoyen collection, and provides a synthesis of the author's most important work. Through a close study of the many new texts, Friberg has made numerous amazing discoveries, including the first known examples of pre-Classical labyrinths and mazes, new texts explaining the famous table text Plimpton 322, and new evidence of Babylonian familiarity with sophisticated mathematical ideas and objects, such as the three-dimensional "Pythagorean equation" and the icosahedron. While the book is reader-friendly, it remains as detailed and exhaustive as possible. It is the most comprehensive treatment of a set of Babylonian mathematical texts ever published and will open up this subject to a new generation of students, mathematicians, and historians of science. Joran Friberg is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden. He has recently published the book Unexpected Links Between Egyptian and Babylonian Mathematics (World Scientific 2005), and its sequel Amazing Traces of a Babylonian Origin in Greek Mathematics (World Scientific 2007).
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