Cover image for A history of Arabic sciences and mathematics
Title:
A history of Arabic sciences and mathematics
Personal Author:
Series:
Culture and civilization in the Middle East ; 29, 33, 36
Publication Information:
London ; New York : Routledge : Centre for Arab Unity Studies, 2012-<2013>
Physical Description:
xiv, 448 pages. : illullustrions. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780415582186

9780203084342

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30000010303761 Q125.A5 R37 2012 v.2 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This volume provides a unique primary source on the history and philosophy of mathematics and the exact sciences in the mediaeval Arab world. The second of five comprehensive volumes, this book offers a detailed exploration of Arabic mathematics in the eleventh century as embodied in the legacy of the celebrated polymath al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham.

Extensive analyses and annotations from the eminent scholar, Roshdi Rashed, support a number of key Arabic texts from Ibn al-Haytham's treatises in infinitesimal mathematics, translated here into English for the first time. Rashed shows how Ibn al-Haytham's works demonstrate a remarkable mathematical competence in mathematical subjects like the quadrature of the circle and of lunes, the calculation of the volumes of paraboloids, the problem of isoperimetric plane figures and solid figures with equal surface areas, along with the extraction of square and cubic roots.

The present text is complemented by the first volume of A History of Arabic Sciences and Mathematics , which focused on founding figures and commentators in the ninth and tenth centuries Archimedean-Apollonian mathematical 'School of Baghdad'. This constellation of works illustrates the historical and epistemological development of 'infinitesimal mathematics' as it became clearly articulated in the oeuvre of Ibn al-Haytham.

Contributing to a more informed and balanced understanding of the internal currents of the history of mathematics and the exact sciences in Islam, and of its adaptive interpretation and assimilation in the European context, this fundamental text will appeal to historians of ideas, epistemologists and mathematicians at the most advanced levels of research.


Author Notes

Roshdi Rashed is one of the most eminent authorities on Arabic mathematics and the exact sciences. A historian and philosopher of mathematics and science and a highly celebrated epistemologist, he is currently Emeritus Research Director (distinguished class) at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris, and is the former Director of the Centre for History of Arabic and Medieval Science and Philosophy at the University of Paris (Denis Diderot, Paris VII). He also holds an Honorary Professorship at the University of Tokyo and an Emeritus Professorship at the University of Mansourah in Egypt.


Table of Contents

Prefacep. xi
Notep. xiii
Introduction: IBN al-Haytham and His Work on Infinitesimal Mathematics
1 Ibn al-Haytham: from Basra to Cairop. 1
2 Al-ÃÄasan ibn al-ÃÄasan and MuÃîammad ibn al-ÃÄasan: mathematician and philosopherp. 11
3 The works of al-ÃÄasan ibn al-Haytham on infinitesimal mathematicsp. 25
Chapter I The Quadrature of Lunes and Circles
1.1 Introductionp. 39
1.2 Mathematical Commentaryp. 42
1.2.1 Treatise on lunesp. 42
1.2.2 Treatise on the quadrature of the circlep. 46
1.2.3 Exhaustive treatise on the figures of lunesp. 49
1.3 Translated Texts
1.3.1 Treatise on Lunesp. 93
1.3.2 Treatise on the Quadrature of the Circlep. 99
1.3.3 Exhaustive Treatise on the Figures of Lunesp. 107
Chapter II Calculation of Volumes of Paraboloids and Spheres and the Exhaustion Method
2.1 Introductionp. 143
2.2 Mathematical Commentaryp. 144
2.2.1 Calculation of volumes of paraboloidsp. 144
2.2.2.1 Arithmetical lemmasp. 144
2.2.2.2 Volume of a paraboloid of revolutionp. 151
2.2.2.3 The volume of the second species of paraboloidp. 160
2.2.2.4 Study of surrounding solidsp. 164
2.2.3 Calculation of the volume of a spherep. 168
2.3 Translated Texts
2.3.1 On the Measurement of the Paraboloidp. 177
2.3.2 On the Measurement of the Spherep. 221
2.3.3 On the Division of Two Different Magnitudes as Mentioned in the First Proposition of the Tenth Book of Euclid's Elementsp. 235
Chapter III The Problems of Isoperimetric and Isepiphanic Figures and the Study of the Solid Angle
3.1 Introductionp. 239
3.2 Mathematical Commentaryp. 242
3.3 Translated Text: On the Sphere which is the Largest of all the Solid Figures having Equal Perimeters and On the Circle which is the Largest of all the Plane Figures having Equal Perimetersp. 305
Appendix: The Approximation of Roots
4.1 Mathematical Commentaryp. 343
4.2 Translated Texts
4.3.1 On the Cause of the Square Root, its Doubling and its Displacementp. 351
4.3.2 On the Extraction of the Side of a Cubep. 357
Supplementary Notes
1 On the Arithmetic of Transactionsp. 361
2 The Configuration of the Universe : a Book by al-ÃÄasan ibn al-Haytham ?p. 362
3 Ibn Sinàn and Ibn al-Haytham on the subject of âÇ shadow lines'p. 377
4 Commentary in the Resolution of Doubts by Ibn al-Haytham on Proposition X.1 of the Elementsp. 381
5 List of Ibn al-Haytham's worksp. 391
Bibliographyp. 429
Indexes
Index of namesp. 439
Subject index
Index of works