Early Uses of Mathematical Symbols - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

Early Uses of Mathematical Symbols

Description:

Acrophonic means that the symbols for the numbers come from the first ... Negative integers as exponents: were used Nicolas Chuquet (1445-1500) in 1484 in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:251
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: Andr752
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Early Uses of Mathematical Symbols


1
Early Uses of Mathematical Symbols
  • By Andrea Schulz

2
Greek number system
  • Acrophonic System
  • First millennium B.C.
  • Acrophonic means that the symbols for the numbers
    come from the first letter of the number name.

3
Greek number system
  • Here is an example of the Greek Acrophonic number
    system
  • This is symbols for the numbers 5,10,100, 1000,
    10,000.

4
Greek number system
  • The Greek system looks a lot like Roman numerals.
  • 1-10 in Greek acrophonic numbers.

5
Egyptian numerals
  • Based on hieroglyphs from around 3000 B.C.
  • Hieroglyphs are pictures representing words.
  • The Egyptians has a bases 10 system of
    hieroglyphs for numerals.

6
Egyptian numerals
  • Here are the numeral hieroglyphs.

7
Too Much info
  • I could have covered every culture and the
    symbols used in their number system. However
    that would be a very long report.
  • I narrowed my search to earliest use of
    Mathematical operations.
  • Plus sign
  • Minus sign
  • Multiplication
  • Division
  • Exponents
  • Order of operation

8
Addition and Subtraction Symbols
  • Plus () and minus (-) signs
  • Nicole d Oresme (1323-1382) may have used a
    figure which looks like a plus symbol as an
    abbreviation for the Latin et (meaning and)
  • The plus and minus symbols only came into general
    use in England after they were used by Robert
    Recorde in 1557 in The Whetstone of Witte.
  • The plus and minus symbols were in use before
    they appeared in print, for example they were
    painted on barrels to indicate whether or not the
    barrels were full.

9
Multiplication Symbols
  • X was used by William Oughtred (1574-1660) in the
    Clavis Mathematicae composed about 1628 and
    published in London in 1631. Cajori calls X St.
    Andrews Cross.
  • The dot ( ) was advocated by Gottfried Wilhelm
    Leibniz (1646-1716) According to Cajori.

10
Division Symbols
  • Closed parenthesis. The arrangement 8)24 was used
    by Michael Stifel (1487-1567) in Arithmetica
    integra, which was completed in 1540 and
    published in 1544 in Nuernberg.
  • The colon () was used in 1633 in a text entitled
    Johnson Arithmetik. However Johnson only used
    the symbol to indicate fractions, not for
    division.
  • The obelus () was first used as a division
    symbol by Johann Rahn (1622-1676)

11
Exponents
  • Positive integers in exponents Nicole Oresme
    (1323-1382) used number to indicate powering in
    the fourteenth century, although he did not use
    raised numbers.
  • Negative integers as exponents were used Nicolas
    Chuquet (1445-1500) in 1484 in Le Triparty en la
    Science Des Nomres.

12
Scientific Notation
  • The earliest use of scientific notation is not
    know. It is believed that physicist working with
    electricity in the decade or so up to 1873.
  • In 1863, the Annual Encyclopedia and Register of
    Important Events of the Year 1862 the article on
    Electricity has on page 404.

13
Order of Operations
  • The idea that multiplication precedes addition
    and subtraction was in early algebra books in the
    16th century.
  • In 1892 in Mental Arithmetic Bailey advised
    avoiding expressions containing both and X.
  • In 1898 in Text Book of Algebra by Fisher and
    I.J. Schwatt, a b x b is interpreted as
  • (a b) x b.

14
Bibliography
  • http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
    /Greek_numbers.html
  • http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
    /Egyptian_numerals.html.
  • http//jeff560.tripod.com/operation.html
  • Cabillion, Julio Gonzalez A Century of
    Mathematics in America, Part 1, Vol. 1, 1988.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com