Ancient Chinese Mathematics

18,238 views 41 slides Jan 04, 2014
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About This Presentation

This presentation is about the ancient discoveries of Chinese Mathematics: its writings, contributors and usage.


Slide Content

ANCIENT CHINESE MATHEMATICS

Mathematics in China  emerged independently by the 11th century BC.

The Chinese independently developed very large and  negative numbers ,  decimals , a place value decimal system , a  system , algebra ,  geometry , and  trigonometry.

Knowledge of Chinese mathematics before 254 BC is somewhat fragmentary, and even after this date the manuscript traditions are obscure.

As in other early societies the focus was on  astronomy  in order to perfect the agricultural calendar, and other practical tasks, and not on establishing formal systems.

The result of obvious linguistic and geographic barriers, as well as content, Chinese mathematics and that of the mathematics of the ancient Mediterranean world are presumed to have developed more or less independently up to the time when  The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art   reached its final form, while the   Writings on Reckoning  and  Huainanzi   are roughly contemporary with classical Greek mathematics.

Ancient Chinese mathematicians did not develop an axiomatic approach, but made advances in algorithm development and algebra. The achievement of Chinese algebra reached its zenith in the 13th century, when  Zhu Shijie  invented method of four unknowns.

Frequently, elements of the mathematics of early societies correspond to rudimentary results found later in branches of modern mathematics such as geometry or number theory.

The  Pythagorean theorem  for example, has been attested to the time of the  Duke of Zhou . Knowledge of Pascal's triangle  has also been shown to have existed in China centuries before Pascal, such as by Shen Kuo.

Early Chinese Mathematics

Simple mathematics on  Oracle bone script  date back to the Shang Dynasty (1600–1050 BC). One of the oldest surviving mathematical works is the  Yi Jing , which greatly influenced written literature during the Zhou Dynasty (1050–256 BC).

Oracle Bone Script Decimal

Yi Jing or I Ching

For mathematics, the book included a sophisticated use of  hexagrams . Leibniz pointed out, the I Ching contained elements of binary numbers.

Since the Shang period, the Chinese had already fully developed a  decimal system . Since early times, Chinese understood basic arithmetic (which dominated far eastern history), algebra, equations, and negative numbers with counting rods.

Although the Chinese were more focused on arithmetic and advanced algebra for astronomical uses, they were also the first to develop negative numbers ,  algebraic geometry  (only Chinese geometry) and the usage of decimals .

Math was one of the  Liù Yì  ( 六艺 ) or  Six Arts , students were required to master during the Zhou Dynasty (1122–256 BC).

Learning them all perfectly was required to be a perfect gentleman, or in the Chinese sense, a "Renaissance Man" . Six Arts have their roots in the Confucian philosophy.

They also have geometry which is the oldest existent mathematical work in China which is written in the Mo Jing . It is similar to the definitions given by the Greeks; Euclid and Plato.

The Mathematics In Different Dynasties

Qin Mathematics Not much is known about Qin dynasty mathematics, or before, due to the burning of books and burying of scholars. The Qin dynasty created a standard system of weights. 

Han Mathematics In the Han Dynasty, numbers were developed into a place value decimal system and used on a counting board with a set of counting rods called  chousuan , consisted of only nine symbols, a blank space on the counting board stood for zero.

Suan shu shu an ancient Chinese text on mathematics approximately seven thousand characters in length written on 190 bamboo strips

The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art  is a Chinese mathematics book, its oldest archaeological date being 179 AD (traditionally dated 1000 BC)  the author(s) are unknown, they made a huge contribution in the eastern world

It was one of the most influential of all Chinese mathematical books and it is composed of some 246 problems. It also contains the popular theory, Chou Pei .

Chou Pei

Chou Pei is oldest existing Chinese texts containing formal mathematical theories and were produced during the Han period.

The  Arithmetic Classic of the Gnomon and the Circular Paths of Heaven (Chou Pei Suan Ching ) is   dated before the 3rd century B.C and contains various modern mathematical principles such as working with fractions using a common denominator, and proofs of many geometrical theories

The text contains an accurate process of division for finding out the square root of numbers. In fact, the  Chou Pei  presents the oldest known proof of the right-angle triangle theory in the  hsuan-thu  diagram.

This theory, commonly known as the "Pythagorean theorem" shows that the sum of the squares of the legs of a right triangle is equal to the squares of the hypotenuse or a 2 + b 2  = c 2 .

The Chou Pei was not an isolated academic text shared only by a few ancient Chinese mathematicians. The principles in the text were reflected in the popular approach known as  chi- chu ,  or "the piling up of squares" which was a process of using geometry to solve algebraic problems.

Sample Problems In Pythagorean Theorem or Chou Pei

Find the value of ‘x’ using Chou Pei or the Pythagorean Theorem

QUIZ !
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