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Vila Wolf's Dyslexic Folklorist Ranting

@ladykrampus / ladykrampus.tumblr.com

Hmm... I've got a strange and bizarre mind. I know what you're saying, doesn't everyone on the internet? I can say this, I'm not for everyone. It was once said that I've got a razor wit, a dark sarcasm and one hell of a twisted sense of humor. I like horror, I am a folklorist and I smoke. "Let me share something with you, a secret, We believe what we want to believe....the rest is all smoke and mirrors." - Arnaud de Fohn Posts I've Liked
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Math, Everyone’s Favorite Subject

It’s time for a facts list! This one delves into mathematical history:

  • The word “math” is from the Proto-Indo-European word *me, which means “to cut grass” and is related to the word “mow.” 
  • Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1647–1716) was a universal genius and a bit of an oddball who used both the cap symbol (∩) and the dot ( · ) for the multiplication symbol. While the dot is still sometimes used, the cap symbol is now most often used to indicate intersection in set theory.
  • While the Babylonians were the first to use multiplication tables over 4,000 years ago, their tables were based on base 60.
  • The oldest known tables using base 10 (similar to modern mathematics) were the Chinese, dating to about 305 BCE.
  • In 628 CE, Indian philosopher Brahmagupta wrote a landmark text on mathematics called “The Opening of the Universe.” In it, he proposes a multiplication system called gomutrika, which he says is “like the trajectory of a cow’s urine.”
  • Before Arabic numerals made it to Europe in the 1200s, medieval Europe used Roman numbers, which were straightforward for simple addition equations, but were extremely difficult to multiply or divide.
  • In 1980, Shakuntala Devi from India entered the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s fastest multiplier when she correctly multiplied two 13-digit numbers in 28 seconds.
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The Timbuktu Manuscripts showing both mathematics and astronomy Timbuktu Manuscripts or (Tombouctou Manuscripts) is a blanket term for the large number of historically important manuscripts that have been preserved for centuries in private households in Timbuktu, Mali. The collections include manuscripts about art, medicine, philosophy, and science of the late Abbasid Caliphate, as well as priceless copies of the Quran. The number of manuscripts in the collections has been estimated as high as 700,000.

Source: Wikipedia
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Babylonian mathematics is …

"Babylonian mathematics was any mathematics developed or practiced by the people of Mesopotamia, from the days of the early Sumerians to the fall of Babylon in 539 BC. Babylonian mathematical texts are plentiful and well edited. In respect of time they fall in two distinct groups: one from the Old Babylonian period (1830-1531 BC), the other mainly Seleucid from the last three or four centuries BC. In respect of content there is scarcely any difference between the two groups of texts. Thus Babylonian mathematics remained constant, in character and content, for nearly two millennia."

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“The clay tablet with the catalog number 322 in the G. A. Plimpton Collection at Columbia University may be the most famous mathematical tablet from ancient times. It was scribed in the Old Babylonian period and shows the most advanced mathematics, more than a thousand years before the development of Greek mathematics. It is unique. No other tablets like it have been found, in contrast to many “school” tablets of reciprocals and mathematical problems found in abundance.

Plimpton 322 is known throughout the world to those interested in the history of mathematics as a result of the work of Otto Neugebauer, chair of Brown University’s History of Mathematics Department. In the early 1940’s he and his assistant Abraham Sachs discovered that it contained Pythagorean triples, integer solutions of the equation a2 + b2 = c2.”

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