Catálogo bibliográfico FCT/UNL
Image from Google Jackets

Mathematical tablets from Tell Harmal [Documento electrónico] / Carlos Gonçalves

Main Author: Gonçalves, CarlosLanguage: eng.Country: US - United States of America.Publication: Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2015Description: XV, 141 p. 21 il.ISBN: 978-3-319-22524-1.Series: Sources and studies in the history of mathematics and physical sciencesOnline Resources:Click here to access online
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
E-Books Biblioteca NOVA FCT Não Ficção QA21 FCT 96678 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available

Colocação: Online

This work offers a re-edition of twelve mathematical tablets from the site of Tell Harmal, in the borders of present-day Baghdad. In ancient times, Tell Harmal was Šaduppûm, a city representative of the region of the Diyala river and of the kingdom of Ešnunna, to which it belonged for a time. These twelve tablets were originally published in separate articles in the beginning of the 1950s and mostly contain solved problem texts. Some of the problems deal with abstract matters such as triangles and rectangles with no reference to daily life, while others are stated in explicitly empirical contexts, such as the transportation of a load of bricks, the size of a vessel, the number of men needed to build a wall and the acquisition of oil and lard. This new edition of the texts is the first to group them, and takes into account all the recent developments of the research in the history of Mesopotamian mathematics. Its introductory chapters are directed to readers interested in an overview of the mathematical contents of these tablets and the language issues involved in their interpretation, while a chapter of synthesis discusses the ways history of mathematics has typically dealt with the mathematical evidence and inquires how and to what degree mathematical tablets can be made part of a picture of the larger social context. Furthermore, the volume contributes to a geography of the Old Babylonian mathematical practices, by evidencing that scribes at Šaduppûm made use of cultural material that was locally available. The edited texts are accompanied by translations, philological, and mathematical commentaries.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
Moodle da Biblioteca Slideshare da Biblioteca Siga-nos no Issuu Twitter da Biblioteca Instagram da Biblioteca Facebook da Biblioteca Blog da Biblioteca