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An exerpt from here.


If you ever failed algebra, forgot your algorithms, or struggled in chemistry, you might blame it on ancient history instead of your highschool teacher. Al-jabr (algebra), al-khowarazimi (algorithm), and al-kimiya (achemy/chemistry) all originated from the Arab civilization in what is now modern-day Iraq. After the Islamic conquest of Persia in the 7th century, Baghdad became the capital of scholarship in the Near East. Merchants, scientists, and other intellects from as far as China traveled there, making it one of the most diverse and advanced cities of the time. Baghdad is one reputed bithplace of the Arabic-speaking mathematician Abu Abdullah Mohammed ibn Musa. Some sources say that he was born in Khwarizm, hence his other name: Al-kwarizmi ("the man from khwarizm"). It was one of Al-kwarizmi's books (known in Latin as Algoritmi de numero Indorum) which introduced algebra, algorithms, and "Arabic" numerals to the Western world. Not only did the title of this book the provide our word algorithm but it also explains why the Spanish for "digit" is guarismo. Before Algoritmi de numero Indorum appeared on the scene, European mathematicians had nothing but Roman numerals. Have you ever tried multiplying Roman numerals? How about deriving square roots? All such operations became a lot easier with a positional notation using Arabic numerals and the new concept - zero. Zero comes from the Arabic sifr, meaning “empty” as the symbol for "zero" represents an "empty" place in the positional notation. Some scholars believe that sifr comes from the Sanskrit shunya, "empty" as the Arabs did not invent their numerals, they borrowed them from the Indians. But, to be fair, the Indians got the idea from the Babylonians so we end up back in Iraq. Even closer to sifr in sound is cipher (which has two meanings: "a code" and "zero") and the French verb chiffre, "quantify".
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Date/Time: 2007-04-13 19:17 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] stacymckenna.livejournal.com
What, exactly, do you find so disturbing about that?
Date/Time: 2007-04-13 21:25 (UTC)Posted by: (Anonymous)
I believe it would be the fact that today the middle-east seems to value killing and hate more than knowledge.
Date/Time: 2007-04-13 21:25 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] daeglan.livejournal.com
I believe it would be the fact that today the middle-east seems to value killing and hate more than knowledge.
Date/Time: 2007-04-14 02:50 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] daeglan.livejournal.com
We are not destroying it. That would be the Muslims and their IEDs. We are trying to rebuild the infrastructure in Iraq. Which is a little difficult when other people are blowing it up after you have rebuilt something. I would have a lot of respect for the Muslim faith. Except large segments of their population hate us, Jews, and Christians more than they love their children. Mostly I see Muslims blowing themselves up to kill us. I find it sad that the Muslim faith used to be the pinnacle of civilization and now they seem to be stuck in the 1200s.
Date/Time: 2007-04-14 01:25 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] stacymckenna.livejournal.com
That I can sympathize with.
Date/Time: 2007-04-24 17:01 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/retrospection_/
Now, i new about the numbers, but not the concepts to use them

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