Leading Authors of Today's Magazine
  • Home
  • Editorial
  • Featured New Authors
  • Anthologies
    • Moguls Unleashed
      • Dr. Dashnay Holmes is a Dynamic Entrepreneur!
      • Dr. Jane Mukami
      • Dr. Demaryl Roberts-Singleton
      • Dr. Desirie Sykes
      • Dr. Terry Golightly
      • Dr. Shontae Davidson
      • Dr. Adrienne Velazquez
      • Dr. Nichole Pettway
      • Dr. Daniela Peel: Corporate Wellness
  • News and Updates
  • More
    • Multimedia
    • Author of the Month
    • Book Reviews
    • Interviews and Conversations
    • Community and Engagement
    • Writing Resources
    • Genre Explorations
No Result
View All Result
Leading Authors Of Today's Magazine
No Result
View All Result

Book Review: ‘The Secret Lives of Numbers,’ by Kate Kitagawa and Timothy Revell

July 24, 2024
in Book Reviews
0
Home Book Reviews
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Book Review: ‘The Secret Lives of Numbers,’ by Kate Kitagawa and Timothy Revell


THE SECRET LIVES OF NUMBERS: A Hidden History of Math’s Unsung Trailblazers, by Kate Kitagawa and Timothy Revell


Mathematics has been described as the longest continuous human thought. This thought is typically said to have been held most effectively by Western mathematicians and mainly by men. The narrative supporting this notion regards mathematics as having its origins in ancient Greece, and the mathematics done in other early cultures as peripheral — barbarian science or “ethnomathematics,” even though non-Western thinkers often practiced math that was more advanced than what Europeans knew.

In “The Secret Lives of Numbers,” Kate Kitagawa, a mathematics historian, and Timothy Revell, a science writer, intend by reasoned and scholarly means to overthrow the “assumption that the European way of doing things is superior.”

Their book begins with prehistoric counting methods (one of the earliest was based on the number 60, unlike our own base-10 system) and goes on to the fourth-century Alexandrian women Pandrosion, a geometer who solved the difficult problem of doubling the volume of a cube (ancient mathematicians lacked the algebra that makes this straightforward), and Hypatia, who wrote mathematical commentaries, including on Apollonius’ “Conics,” an investigation of circles, ellipses and other shapes. Kitagawa and Revell speculate that Johannes Kepler, who described the orbits of the planets in the 17th century, may have been influenced by her contributions.

Overlooked or forgotten accomplishments by women mathematicians are a recurring theme. There is a chapter on Sophie Kowalevski, a 19th-century Russian who became the first woman math professor, in Sweden. Employing methods that no one before her had thought of using, Kowalevski solved a recalcitrant problem involving the mathematics of a spinning top. The French Academy of Sciences heard of her work and, hoping to have her submit it, framed its annual prize in 1888 around the spinning top problem. Kowalevski missed the deadline, and so the academy extended it by three months. When the judges gave her the prize, they increased the award money by nearly half, a rare example of a woman mathematician being favored by and above male colleagues.

Kitagawa and Revell devote a chapter to the House of Wisdom, a kind of exalted library and school in eighth-century Baghdad where Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, often referred to as the father of algebra, did some of his work, and they highlight the women, called “human computers,” at Harvard in the late 19th century who refined the application of light wavelengths to classify stars. Toward the end of the book, the authors discuss the glorious, god-soaked and essentially self-taught early-20th-century Indian mathematician Srinavasa Ramanujan, whose suppositions were so profound and wide-ranging that their implications are still being considered.

As well as knowing history, Kitagawa and Revell are expert explainers of mathematics. Anyone who has never been sure what an algorithm is can understand the concept here, and their account of calculus is so lucid and compact that I found it thrilling. It is with calculus, though, that they slip, perhaps, into something like advocacy.

The invention of calculus is traditionally attributed to Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz, working independently in the 17th century. However, Kitagawa and Revell write that “it is wrong to claim that the origins of calculus lie with either Leibniz or Newton, as one thing is certain: Neither of them got there first.” Instead, they say, calculus was brought into being in India in the 14th century by a mathematician named Madhava. Madhava taught at a school in Kerala and made use of procedures that are subordinate elements of calculus.

Kitagawa and Revell cite the Indian mathematician George Gheverghese Joseph, who wrote about the matter in a 2009 book, “A Passage to Infinity.” Joseph, they say, “argues that there was a pathway for knowledge from India to the West,” which suggests that “Leibniz and Newton could have been influenced by the school in Kerala.”

The claim is based in part on the possibility that Jesuits brought Madhava’s work to Europe, but in his book Joseph writes that a “painstaking trawl of the mass of manuscripts” has provided “no direct evidence of the conjectured transmission.” Perhaps, he suggests, European sailors used Madhava’s work in navigation. It might then have been absorbed into European practices without anyone knowing, centuries later, where it had come from. This would be a case of someone who told someone who told someone and so on, more than 600 years ago, a circumstance virtually impossible to substantiate. On the other hand, novel discoveries rarely stay where they were made.

Madhava’s work serves to make the point that complex mathematics belongs to all people and all cultures in all periods, and that to dismiss historical work as ethnomathematics is to express a prejudice. When one acknowledges the intellectual reach of these ancient achievements and the love of pure thought they suggest, it leads one to wonder where else we might look for illumination and what we might find.


THE SECRET LIVES OF NUMBERS: A Hidden History of Math’s Unsung Trailblazers | By Kate Kitagawa and Timothy Revell | William Morrow | 310 pp. | $32.99



Credit goes to @www.nytimes.com

Previous Post

Picture Perception and Description Test | ALL ABOUT PPDT | SSB INTERVIEW | FORCE DEFENCE ACEDEMY

Next Post

Jack Sparacino’s New Book, “Street Signs,” is an Amusing Collection That Celebrates the Peculiar and Thought-Provoking Street Signs Found Across the Country and Beyond

Next Post
Jack Sparacino’s New Book, “Street Signs,” is an Amusing Collection That Celebrates the Peculiar and Thought-Provoking Street Signs Found Across the Country and Beyond

Jack Sparacino’s New Book, "Street Signs," is an Amusing Collection That Celebrates the Peculiar and Thought-Provoking Street Signs Found Across the Country and Beyond

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Random News

Author Interview: ‘Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream’ by David Platt

Author Interview: ‘Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream’ by David Platt

...

Rugby-Coventry author duo set for book signings

Rugby-Coventry author duo set for book signings

...

Can Craft Become a Commodity? The Complicated Relationship Between Books and AI | Arts

Can Craft Become a Commodity? The Complicated Relationship Between Books and AI | Arts

...

My #1 rule for reading books..

My #1 rule for reading books..

...

kim Taehyung with makeup VS without Makeup  #BTS #taehyung

kim Taehyung with makeup VS without Makeup #BTS #taehyung

...

R.L. Stine Teaches Writing For Young Audiences | Official Trailer | MasterClass

R.L. Stine Teaches Writing For Young Audiences | Official Trailer | MasterClass

...

About us

Today's Author Magazine

Welcome to Today's Author Magazine, the go-to destination for discovering fresh talent in the literary world. We shine a light on new authors and captivating anthologies, providing readers with a diverse array of stories and insights. Here's a look at the vibrant categories that make up our magazine

RecentNews

Dr. Donald Variste

The Power of Voice: Rev. Dr. Serena J. Rowan’s Journey of Leadership and Influence

Dr. Janie Melinda Cauthorne

Dr. Tracy Banks Carr

Betrayed by George R. R. Martin | Tolarian Community College X Dragonsteel | #brandonsanderson

Categories

  • Anthologies
  • Author of the Month
  • Book Reviews
  • Community and Engagement
  • Editorial
  • Featured
  • Featured New Authors
  • Genre Explorations
  • How-to
  • Interviews and Conversations
  • Multimedia
  • News and Updates
  • Other
  • Writing Resources

RandomNews

International Children’s Book Day 2024: Date, theme, history, significance and all you need to know

AGAGAGAA #watpadd #booktok #armylover #bts

Final Strategy for SST Class 10 Boards 2025 | Victory Over Boards 💪| Digraj Sir

Ira Mukhoty’s new book on Awadh history resurrects Nawab Begum, Bahu Begum

This 34-year-old mom quit her job as a music teacher—now she makes six-figures and works from her ‘cozy’ mountaintop home

  • Home
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Moguls Unleashed
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.