Mathematics in India

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, Jan 18, 2009 - History - 357 pages

Based on extensive research in Sanskrit sources, Mathematics in India chronicles the development of mathematical techniques and texts in South Asia from antiquity to the early modern period. Kim Plofker reexamines the few facts about Indian mathematics that have become common knowledge--such as the Indian origin of Arabic numerals--and she sets them in a larger textual and cultural framework. The book details aspects of the subject that have been largely passed over in the past, including the relationships between Indian mathematics and astronomy, and their cross-fertilizations with Islamic scientific traditions. Plofker shows that Indian mathematics appears not as a disconnected set of discoveries, but as a lively, diverse, yet strongly unified discipline, intimately linked to other Indian forms of learning.


Far more than in other areas of the history of mathematics, the literature on Indian mathematics reveals huge discrepancies between what researchers generally agree on and what general readers pick up from popular ideas. This book explains with candor the chief controversies causing these discrepancies--both the flaws in many popular claims, and the uncertainties underlying many scholarly conclusions. Supplementing the main narrative are biographical resources for dozens of Indian mathematicians; a guide to key features of Sanskrit for the non-Indologist; and illustrations of manuscripts, inscriptions, and artifacts. Mathematics in India provides a rich and complex understanding of the Indian mathematical tradition.


**Author's note: The concept of "computational positivism" in Indian mathematical science, mentioned on p. 120, is due to Prof. Roddam Narasimha and is explored in more detail in some of his works, including "The Indian half of Needham's question: some thoughts on axioms, models, algorithms, and computational positivism" (Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 28, 2003, 1-13).

 

Contents

III
1
IV
4
V
10
VI
13
VII
16
VIII
28
IX
35
X
40
XXVIII
210
XXIX
217
XXX
218
XXXI
221
XXXII
248
XXXIII
251
XXXIV
255
XXXV
256

XI
43
XII
48
XIII
53
XIV
57
XV
61
XVI
66
XVII
72
XVIII
105
XIX
110
XX
113
XXI
121
XXII
122
XXIII
157
XXIV
162
XXV
173
XXVI
182
XXVII
207
XXXVI
260
XXXVII
271
XXXVIII
279
XXXIX
280
XL
282
XLI
288
XLII
295
XLIII
299
XLIV
302
XLV
304
XLVI
307
XLVII
312
XLVIII
317
XLIX
327
L
353
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About the author (2009)

Kim Plofker is visiting assistant professor of mathematics at Union College.

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