DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

The Oxford Handbook of the History of Mathematics

Eleanor Robson editor Jacqueline Stedall editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:10th Feb '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

The Oxford Handbook of the History of Mathematics cover

This Handbook explores the history of mathematics under a series of themes which raise new questions about what mathematics has been and what it has meant to practise it. It addresses questions of who creates mathematics, who uses it, and how. A broader understanding of mathematical practitioners naturally leads to a new appreciation of what counts as a historical source. Material and oral evidence is drawn upon as well as an unusual array of textual sources. Further, the ways in which people have chosen to express themselves are as historically meaningful as the contents of the mathematics they have produced. Mathematics is not a fixed and unchanging entity. New questions, contexts, and applications all influence what counts as productive ways of thinking. Because the history of mathematics should interact constructively with other ways of studying the past, the contributors to this book come from a diverse range of intellectual backgrounds in anthropology, archaeology, art history, philosophy, and literature, as well as history of mathematics more traditionally understood. The thirty-six self-contained, multifaceted chapters, each written by a specialist, are arranged under three main headings: 'Geographies and Cultures', 'Peoples and Practices', and 'Interactions and Interpretations'. Together they deal with the mathematics of 5000 years, but without privileging the past three centuries, and an impressive range of periods and places with many points of cross-reference between chapters. The key mathematical cultures of North America, Europe, the Middle East, India, and China are all represented here as well as areas which are not often treated in mainstream history of mathematics, such as Russia, the Balkans, Vietnam, and South America. A vital reference for graduates and researchers in mathematics, historians of science, and general historians.

Review from previous edition "wonderful food for thought for any practitioner" * Times Higher Education Supplement *
"a splendid, something-for-everybody treasure-trove of interesting, informative, challenging, well written testaments to the variety and vigor of history of mathematics in our time" * Historia Mathematica *
"Well written, well edited and well rounded... a healthy contribution to a burgeoning field of newly self-aware research." * British Journal for the History of Science *

ISBN: 9780199603190

Dimensions: 242mm x 170mm x 49mm

Weight: 1460g

928 pages