87
The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamia The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamia

The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    5

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

The Mathematics of

Ancient Mesopotamia

The Mathematics of

Ancient Mesopotamia

Page 2: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Background

• Mesopotamia: Greek 9,F@B@J":4", “between the rivers,” specifically the Tigris and Euphrates. This area occupies most of what is present-day Iraq, and parts of Syria, Turkey, Lebanon, and Iran.

Page 3: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere
Page 4: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere
Page 5: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Background

• Thought to be the (or at least a) “cradle of civilization.”

• Delta region extremely fertile – The “Fertile Crescent”

• Semi-arid climate required extensive irrigation projects

Page 6: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Four Empires• Four civilizations flourished here, from

3100 BCE to 539 BCE. These included the early Sumerian (3100 – 2400 BCE) and Akkadian (2400-2100 BCE) empires, and the later Old Babylonian (1800-1200 BCE) and Assyrian (1200 -612 BCE; Ashurbanipal) empires. There followed a brief Neo-Babylonian period from 612 –539 BCE. Then Persia. Then Alexander the Great. Then….

Page 7: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some names you might recognize

• Hammurabi, founder of the Old Babylonian Empire

• Code of Hammurabi -232 laws, lex talionus, an eye for an eye– If anyone strikes

the body of a man higher in rank than he, he shall receive sixty blows with an ox-whip in public.

Page 8: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some names you might recognize

• The Epic of Gilgamesh– Poem relates story of Gilgamesh, ruler of

Uruk, who seeks out survivor of great flood in quest of immortality.

• Ur of the Chaldees, Birthplace of Abraham.

• King Nebuchadnezzar (Neo-Babylonian Empire)

Page 9: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Sources

• Most of what we know about Mesompotamian mathematics comes from several hundred clay tablets belonging to the Old Babylonian kingdom, around roughly 1800-1600 BCE.

• Tablets are of two kinds: – Table texts– Problem texts

Page 10: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

But Before We Go There…

• We need to understand a little about the number system used in that Old Babylonian era. How it works and how it evolved is an interesting story in itself.

Page 11: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Number System

• A base-60 positional system with individual numbers formed by two different wedge-shaped marks: a horizontal wedge worth 10 and a vertical wedge worth 1.

• Numbers less than 60 were written using these two symbols in a purely additive fashion.

Page 12: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Number System

Page 13: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Notational Aside:

• Notice that the marks from the previous table don’t look exactly like the and the that I used a while ago. They look even less like the marks I’ll end up using from here on because they are easier: ‹ and ˅. There is considerable variation in both the original texts and the modern interpretations.

Page 14: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Number System

• These 59 symbols would be written in a place value system based on powers of 60. Powers of 60 increased from right to left, just as powers of 10 increase from right to left in our system.

Page 15: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Number System

Page 16: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

The First of Two Problems:

Page 17: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

The Second of Two Problems:

Page 18: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Resolution of Problems

• These two problems were usually quite easily resolved by the context of the arithmetic being done, so it bothers us much more than it did the Babylonians. Also, there were very frequently units attached. For example, any ambiguity in writing 1 1 is resolved if we say $1 1₵.

Page 19: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Resolution of Problems

• In about 300 BC there was a placeholder symbol invented and used, but only between symbols, never at the end.

• In our notation, 604 but never 640or 6400.

Page 20: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Our Babylonian Notation

• We will use a comma to separate place values, use a 0 when we need it, and use a semicolon as a “sexagecimal point.” Thus,

Page 21: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

But Why 60? Why? Why?

Some suggested reasons:• Lots of non-repeating sexagecimals,

since 60 as more divisors than 10 (btw, how do you tell if one of our fractions will terminate or repeat when converted to a decimal?).

• Sacred or Mystical numbers• Combination of two number cultures.

Page 22: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Why 60?

• Well, actually, we aren’t sure. • But we’ll talk about one suggested

solution.• According to Peter Rudman in his

book How Mathematics Happened: The First 50,000 Years, it’s probably more like 6’s and 10’s than 60.

Page 23: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Example:

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ‹‹ ٧٧ ‹‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹ ٧

Page 24: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ٧

Page 25: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ‹‹ ٧

Page 26: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹ ٧

Page 27: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ‹‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹ ٧

Page 28: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ‹ ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ٧٧ ‹‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹ ٧

Page 29: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

60x60 60 1 1/60

(carrying row) ‹ ٧ ‹ ٧ ‹

(1st number) ‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧

(2nd number) + ‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧ ‹‹‹ ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧

(Sum) ‹‹‹ ٧٧ ‹‹ ٧٧٧٧ ‹‹ ٧

Page 30: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Alternating 10-for-1 and 6-for -1 Exchanges

Page 31: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Ok, so…..

• We can understand using groups of 10. But we have to ask:

“Why the freak are there groups of 6?”• Well, let’s look at Ancient Sumer:

Page 32: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

• First, realize that these folks used different measures for different things, and that these measures had different “exchanges” from larger to smaller units.

• We did this too:

Page 33: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Weight

16 ounces = 1 pound14 pounds = 1 stone8 stone = 1 hundredweight20 hundredweight = 1 ton

(except for us 100 pounds = 1 hundredweight, and 20 hundredweight = 1 ton = 2000 pounds)

Page 34: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Capacity

8 (fluid) ounces = 1 cup2 cups = 1 pint2 pints = 1 quart4 quarts = 1 gallon

Page 35: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Length:

12 inches = 1 foot3 feet = 1 yard22 yards = 1 chain10 chains = 1 furlong8 furlongs = 1 mile3 miles = 1 league

And then you have rods and links and thous. . . .

Page 36: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Land Measures

• Originally, communal plots of land were laid out in rectangular plots of 1 furlong by 1 chain (660 by 66 feet), or 10 chains by 1 chain (= 1 acre). The furrows ran in the long direction, so the plots were a “furrow long.” So actually furlongs were an agricultural measure that were independent of feet, which was a body-part measure.

Page 37: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

• By the way, a cricket pitch is still 66 feet long, or 1 chain, or a tenth of a furlong.

Page 38: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Moving on….

• Eventually small measures based on body parts had to be reconciled with large agricultural measures like furlongs, so things were shifted and fudged in the measures so that everything was an integral multiple of everything else.

Page 39: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

The Same Thing Happened in Babylon:

• A body-part measure called a kush, about 1 2/3 feet, was the basis for a nindan, which needed to be reconciled with two agricultural measures, the eshe and the USH. The eshe and the USH came pre-loaded with a 6-to-1 exchange, and the nindan and the eshe became an easy 10-to-1 exchange.

Page 40: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

10-for-1 and 6-for-1

• Because units of both length and area were exchanged for larger units in both groups of 10 and groups of 6, using counters that reflected those exchanges greatly facilitated calculations with lengths and areas. And the number system went along for the ride.

Page 41: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

10-for-1 and 6-for-1

• So units of length and area that came pre-loaded with exchanges gave rise to a system of arithmetic with alternating 10-to-1 and 6-to-1 exchanges, and then to a base 60 system. But there was real genius in moving to a place-value system.

• Now, back to Babylon:

Page 42: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Tablet Texts:

• Table Texts• Problem Texts

Page 43: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Table Texts

• Multiplication tables, of which about 160 are known.

• Single tables have the form:p a-rá 1 p

a-rá 2 2pa-rá 3 3p

And so on, up to 20p, then:a-rá 30 30pa-rá 40 40pa-rá 50 50p

Page 44: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Table Texts

• Combined tables (of which there are about 80) have several single tables included on one tablet.

• One of them (A 7897) is a large cylinder containing an almost complete set of tables written in 13 columns. There is a hole through the center of the cylinder so that it could be turned on some kind of peg.

Page 45: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Table Texts

• Reciprocal Tables had reciprocals of numbers from 2 to 81 (provided their sexagecimal representations did not repeat.

• These were used to divide, which they did by multiplying by reciprocals.

Page 46: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Table Texts

• There are a few tables of squares, square roots, cube roots, powers.

• Also some conversions and a few special tables used for particular business transactions (finding market rates).

Page 47: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Table Texts

• It is likely that many of the table texts we have are “exercises” from students learning to be scribes, or perhaps tables copied and made by students for use in computations.

Page 48: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Problem Texts• Also probably intended for

educational purposes. • Story problems aimed at computing a

number. • Often contrived or “tricky” problems.

– If camel A leaves Phoenicia travelling at nindan per day. . . .

• Kinda like our modern story problems or recreational math problems.

Page 49: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Problem Texts

• Largely algebraic problems, focusing on what we would call on linear and quadratic equations (though that’s not at all how the Babylonians thought about this).

• Mainly focused on algorithms, but not on general procedures. Instead, they gave several worked examples.

Page 50: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

A Little Arithmetic

• The book mentions that we don’t really know how the Babylonians did arithmetic like adding and subtracting and we don’t know their algorithms for multiplication and division, except that they divided by multiplying by reciprocals.

Page 51: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Division

• We’ll do 1029 divided by 64:• In our language, we multiply 1029 by

1/64, or

• 17, 9 by 0; 0, 56,15

Page 52: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

0; 0, 56, 15 x 17, 9 2, 15 9 x 15 from table

7, 30 9 x 50 from table; shift

54 9 x 6 from table; shift

4, 15, 17 x 15 from table; shift

14, 10, 17 x 50 from table; shift2

1, 42, 17 x 6 from table; shift2

16; 4, 41, 15

Or in our system, 16.078125

Page 53: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

What About Division by 7?

Page 54: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Story Problems, 1

Page 55: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylon, 2000 BC

• You take 1. Two-thirds of 1 is 0;40.

• Half of this, 0; 20, you multiply by 0;20 and it is 0;6,40,

• you add to 0;35

• and the result 0;41;40 has 0;50 as its square root.

Provo, 2011 AD

Page 56: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylon, 2000 BC

• The 0;20 which you have multiplied by itself, you subtract from 0;50, and 0;30 is the side of the square.

Provo, 2011 AD

Page 57: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Story Problems, 2

Page 58: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

(2/3)(2/3)x+100=x

• First multiply two-thirds by two thirds: result 0;26,40

• Subtract 0;26,40 from 1: result 0;33,20

• Take the reciprocal of 0;33,20: result 1;48

• Multiply 1;48 by 1,40: result 3,00.• 3,00 (qa) is the original quantity.

Page 59: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Story Problems, 3

• I found a stone but did not weigh it. After I weighed out 8 times its weight, added 3 gin. [Then] one-third of one-thirteenth I multiplied by 21, added it and then I weighed it. Result 1 mana. What was the original weight of the stone?

• The weight was 4;30 gin. (1 mana = 60 gin).

Page 60: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere
Page 61: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some Geometry-YBC 7289

Page 62: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Error: 0.000000423847 ish

42; 25, 35 = 42.42638889...

1; 24, 51, 10 = 1.414212963...

30

Page 63: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy

• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere as it revolved around the earth every year. They could also track the movement of the sun in a wiggly path (the ecliptic) against the celestial sphere.

Page 64: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy

Page 65: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy

Page 66: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy, 600 BC

• Early version of the Zodiac, 12 areas of 30 ush each; the sun travels 1 ushper day.

• So, there were 360 ush in a full circuit of the sun.

• The beginning of there being 360 degrees in a circle.

Page 67: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy, 600 BC

• Two different descriptions of how the sun (and moon) changed speeds along their path. One was a step function (two speeds); the other had a linear change over time and was quite accurate.

Page 68: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy, 600 BC

• The Babylonians divided the day into twelve intervals called "kaspu". The solar kaspu was the span of thirty degrees which the Sun travels in two hours of daily motion across Earth's sky.

Page 69: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy, 600 BC

• The Babylonians also predicted certain celestial phenomena, such as eclipses and lunar periods. They began their studies with the eclipse of March 19, 721 BC. Calculations were difficult because the astronomers had no instruments of high accuracy.

Page 70: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Astronomy, 600 BC

• Both the Chaldeans and Babylonian eclipse records are used in studying long-term variations in the lunar orbit in modern theories.

• Records of new moons, eclipses, and the rising of Venus were kept from very early times.

Page 71: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some Astrology

• 2. If in Nisannu the sunrise (looks) sprinkled with blood and the light is cool: rebellion will not stop in the country, there will be devouring by Adad.

• 3. If in Nisannu the normal sunrise (looks) sprinkled with blood: battles

Page 72: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some Astrology

• 4. If in Nisannu the normal sunrise (looks) sprinkled with blood: there will be battles in the country.

• 5. If on the first day of Nisannu the sunrise (looks) sprinkled with blood: grain will vanish in the country, there will be hardship and human flesh will be eaten.

Page 73: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Some Astrology

• 6. If on the first day of Nisannu the sunrise (looks) sprinkled with blood and the light is cool: the king will die and there will be mourning in the country.

• 7. If it becomes visible on the second day and the light is cool: the king's ... high official will die and mourning will not stop in the country.

Page 74: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Oh Happiness!

• 8. If a normal disk is present and one disk stands to the right (and) one to the left: if the king treats the city and his people kindly for reconciliation and they become reconciled,

Page 75: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Oh Happiness!

• 8. If a normal disk is present and one disk stands to the right (and) one to the left: if the king treats the city and his people kindly for reconciliation and they become reconciled, the cities will start vying with each other, city walls will be destroyed, the people will be dispersed.

Page 76: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Constellations

• On the 1st of Nisannu the Hired Man becomes visible. On the 20th of Nisannuthe Crook becomes visible.

• On the 20th of Ayyaru the Jaw of the Bull becomes visible.

• On the 10th of Simanu the True Shepherd of Anu and the Great Twins become visible.

• On the 5th of Du'uzu the Little Twins and the Crab become visible.

Page 77: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Secret Knowledge• "Secret tablet of Heaven, exclusive knowledge of

the great gods, not for distribution! He may teach it to the son he loves. To teach it to a scribe from Babylon or a scribe from Borsippa or any other scholar is an abomination to Nabu and Nisaba.

• ...a Babylonian or a Borsippan or any other scholar.......whoever speaks...

• [Nabu and] Nisaba will not confirm him as a teacher. In poverty and deficiency may they put an end to his ......; may they kill [him] with dropsy."

Page 78: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• The problem with calendars is coordinating the different cycles: days, months, years, and seasons. They don’t come in nice integral multiples.

• By the way, there were two seasons in Babylon, Summer (barley harvest) and Winter (roughly our fall/winter).

Page 79: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• Months in Babylon started when a new moon (actually, a visible crescent) first appeared. So the priest-astronomers would watch and announce the beginning of the month.

• This was common in other cultures, too.

Page 80: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

“Calendar”

• In Rome, a Pontifex (priest) observed the sky and announced a new moon and therefore the new month to the king. For centuries afterward Romans referred to the first day of each new month as Kalends from their word calare (to announce solemnly, to call out). The word calendar derived from this custom.

Page 81: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• Calendar based on cycles of the moon, and needed to be reconciled with the solar year.

• Alternated 29- and 30-day months, and added an extra month three times in every 8 years.

• This still necessitated the King adding an extra month every now and then when the seasons shifted too far.

Page 82: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• In the reign of king Nabû-Nasir, the astronomers of Babylon recognized that 235 lunar months are almost identical to 19 solar years. (The difference is only two hours.) They concluded that seven out of nineteen years ought to be leap years with an extra month.

Page 83: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• In the reign of king Nabû-Nasir, the astronomers of Babylon recognized that 235 lunar months are almost identical to 19 solar years. (The difference is only two hours.) They concluded that seven out of nineteen years ought to be leap years with an extra month.

Page 84: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Babylonian Calendar

• By about 500 BC, there were six years when a second month Addaruis added, and one year with an extra Ululu. The result is that the first day of the month Nisanu (New year's day) was never far (< 27 days) from the vernal equinox, so that the civil calendar and the seasons were never far out of step.

Page 85: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Wrapping Up

• Babylonian mathematics was practically-oriented, aimed at solving problems of commerce, calendaring, and so forth. There is some evidence that Scribes developed a culture of doing difficulty problems to show off their skill. (Think about the “I found a stone” problems.)

Page 86: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Wrapping Up

• We don’t know exactly how the Scribes came up with their solutions, since they only wrote down the numerical steps of a solution.

• They could solve linear and quadratic equations, understood right triangle relations, had some efficient and accurate arithmetic capabilities. They were pretty good astronomers.

Page 87: The Mathematics of Ancient Mesopotamiawilliams/Classes/300F2011/PDFs/PPTs/Babylon PPT.pdf• Ancient peoples of Mesopotamia could easily track the movement of the celestial sphere

Vestiges of Babylon in Our Culture

• Zodiac• 360 degrees, 60 minutes, 60 seconds• 12 hour clocks• Decimal numbers• Others?