Title: Why Question Report:
1Why Question Report (41)What about Chinese
Mathematicians?Revised to What is the history
of Early Chinese Mathematics
- Mark Hovis
- History of Math
- July 16, 2008
2Findings
- Chinese Mathematics developed in isolation from
the rest of the world - due to culture, geography, and politics.
- Much of early Chinese mathematics was produced
because of the need to make calculations for
constructing the calendar and predicting
positions of the heavenly bodies. The Chinese
word 'chouren' refers to both mathematicians
and astronomers showing the close link between
the two areas. - When the country was conquered by foreign
invaders, they were assimilated into the Chinese
culture rather than changing the culture to
their own. As a consequence, there was a
continuous cultural development in China from
around 1000 BC. - There are periods of rapid advance, periods when
a certain level was maintained, and periods of
decline. This was due to the constant fighting
and revision of the policies by succeeding
Emperors .
3- Earliest artifacts were unearthed in 1984 Suan
shu shu (A Book on Arithmetic) dating from
around 180 BCE. It is a book written on bamboo
strips and was found near Jiangling in Hubei
province. - before 100 BCE - tortoise shells.
- Chinese number system used number boards with
rods (vertical horizontal) - The system had place values and zero. (Some
researchers believe that it even allowed for
decimal places.) - 100 BC to 100 AD - The oldest complete surviving
text is the Zhoubi suanjing (Zhou Shadow Gauge
Manual) It is an astronomy text, showing how to
measure the positions of the heavenly bodies
using shadow gauges which are also called
gnomons. - It contains important sections on mathematics.
It contains a statement of the Gougu rule (the
Chinese version of the Pythagorean theorem) and
applies it to surveying, astronomy, and other
topics. It is widely accepted that the work also
contains a proof of Pythagorean theorem
4- 160 to about 227 -The most famous Chinese
mathematics book of all time is the Jiuzhang
Suanshu or, as it is more commonly called, the
Nine Chapters of Mathematical Art. This important
work came to dominate mathematical development
and style for 1500 years. Many later developments
came through commentaries on this text. - Approx. 263 Liu Hui wrote his commentary on the
Jiuzhang Suanshu or the Nine Chapters of
Mathematical Art. Gave a more mathematical
approach than earlier Chinese texts, providing
principles on which his calculations are based.
He found approximations to using regular polygons
with 3 2n sides inscribed in a circle. His best
approximation of was 3.14159 (pi), which he
achieved from a regular polygon of 3072 sides. It
is clear that he understood iterative processes
and the notion of a limit. Gougu rule to
calculate heights of objects and distances to
objects which cannot be measured directly
5- 622 - The beginnings of Chinese algebra is seen
in the work of Wang Xiaotong. - He wrote the Jigu Suanjing (Continuation of
Ancient Mathematics), a text with only 20
problems which later became one of the Ten
Classics. He solved cubic equations by
extending an algorithm for finding cube roots.
His work is seen as a first step towards the
"tian yuan" or "coefficient array method". - 6th thru 9th century - mathematics was taught as
part of the course for the civil service
examinations. Li Chungfeng (602 - 670) was
appointed as the editor-in-chief for a collection
of mathematical treatises to be used for such a
course. The collection is now called the Ten
Classics, a name given to them in 1084. - 10th thru 12th century - very Little change
stagnant period - 1050 Jia Xian developed the first understanding
of Pascal's triangle. Jia Xian is aware of the
expansion of (a b)n and gives a table of the
resulting binomial coefficients in the form of
Pascal's triangle. Jia Xian appears to have
calculated the binomial coefficients up to n 6
and gave an accompanying table similar to
Pascal's triangle which records the coefficients
up to the row 1 6 15 20 15 6 1
6- 13th century Golden Age
- 1247 Qin Jiushao wrote his famous mathematical
treatise Shushu Jiuzhang (Mathematical Treatise
in Nine Sections). He was the first of the great
thirteenth century Chinese mathematicians. This
was a period of major progress during which
mathematics reached new heights. The treatise
contains remarkable work on the Chinese remainder
theorem, gives an equation whose coefficients
are variables and, among other results, Herons
formula for the area of a triangle. Equations up
to degree ten are solved using the
Ruffini-Horner method. - 1248 - Li Zhi (also called Li Yeh) was the next
of the great thirteenth century Chinese
mathematicians. His most famous work is the Ce
yuan hai jing (Sea mirror of circle
measurements). It contains the "tian yuan" or
"coefficient array method" or "method of the
celestial unknown" which was a method to work
with polynomial equations. He also wrote Yi gu
yan duan (New steps in computation) in 1259
which is a more elementary work containing
geometric problems solved by algebra. - 1261 - Yang Hui (about 1238 - about 1298). He
wrote the Xiangjie jiuzhang suanfa (Detailed
analysis of the mathematical rules in theNine
Chapters and their reclassifications), and his
other works were collected into the Yang Hui
suanfa (Yang Hui s methods of computation) which
appeared in 1275. He described multiplication,
division, root-extraction, quadratic and
simultaneous equations, series, computations of
areas of a rectangle, a trapezium, a circle, and
other figures. He also gave a wonderful account
of magic squares and magic circles.
7- 1280 Guo Shoujing produced the Shou shi li
(Works and Days Calendar), worked on spherical
trigonometry, and solved equations using the
Ruffinni-Horner numerical method. He also
developed a cubic interpolation formula
tabulating differences of the accumulated
difference as in Newtons forward difference
interpolation method. - 1299 Zhu Shijie (about 1260 - about 1320) who
wrote the Suanxue qimeng (Introduction to
mathematical studies) published in 1299, and the
Siyuan yujian (True reflections of the four
unknowns) published in 1303. He used an
extension of the "coefficient array method" or
"method of the celestial unknown" to handle
polynomials with up to four unknowns. He also
gave many results on sums of series. This
represents a high point in ancient Chinese
mathematics. - 14th thru 17th century - Little change
stagnant period
8- Other Questions
- Was the development of Chinese mathematics
influenced by other - mathematicians in other parts of the world and
if so, when did this occur and how much
influence was there? - Connections
- Development of Astronomical investigations,
Solving problems of the calendar, trade, land
measurement, architecture, government records
and taxes - Why I picked this question
- I wanted to know why Chinese mathematics is
regularly ignored. - China is known as a cradle of civilization,
with many highly - developed areas of technology, philosophy, etc.
- (The Abacus has been around a long time.)
- Why dont we hear more about early Chinese
mathematics?
9CHRONOLGY OF CHINESEDYNASTIES
10(No Transcript)
11Chinese Numbering System
- Chinese Numerals
- Now the numbers from 1 to 9 had to be formed from
the rods and a fairly natural way was found. - Here are two possible representations
12The biggest problem with this notation was that
it could lead to possible confusion. What was
? It could be 3, or 21, or 12, or even 111. Rods
moving slightly along the row, or not being
placed centrally in the squares, would lead to
the incorrect number being represented.
- The Chinese adopted a clever way to avoid this
problem. They used both forms of the numbers
given in the above illustration. In the units
column they used the form in the lower row, while
in the tens column they used the form in the
upper row, continuing alternately. For example
1234 is represented on the counting board by - and 45698 by
13ZeroThere was still no need for a zero on the
counting board for a square was simply left
blank. The alternating forms of the numbers again
helped to show that there was indeed a space.For
example 60390 would be represented as
14- Ancient arithmetic texts described how to perform
arithmetic operations on the counting board. For
example Sun Zi, in the first chapter of the Sunzi
suanjing (Sun Zi's Mathematical Manual), gives
instructions on using counting rods to multiply,
divide, and compute square roots.
15Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art
- The Jiuzhang suanshu or Nine Chapters on the
Mathematical Art is a practical handbook of
mathematics consisting of 246 problems intended
to provide methods to be used to solve everyday
problems of engineering, surveying, trade, and
taxation. It has played a fundamental role in the
development of mathematics in China, not
dissimilar to the role of Euclid's Elements in
the mathematics which developed from the
foundations set up by the ancient Greeks. There
is one major difference which we must examine
right at the start of this article and this is
the concept of proof. - It is well known what that Euclid, for example,
gives rigorous proofs of his results. Failure to
see similar rigorous proofs in Chinese works such
as the Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art led
to historians believing that the Chinese gave
formulas without justification. This however is
simply an example of historians well versed in
mathematics which is essentially derived from
Greek mathematics, thinking that Chinese
mathematics was inferior since it was different.
Recent work has begun to correct this false
impression and understand that there are
different understandings of "proof". For example
in 8 Chemla shows that Chinese mathematicians
certainly understood how to give convincing
arguments that their methodology for solving
particular problems was correct.
16- Chapter 1 Land Surveying.
- Chapter 2 Millet and Rice.
- Chapter 3 Distribution by Proportion
- Chapter 4 Short Width.
- Chapter 5 Civil Engineering.
- Chapter 6 Fair Distribution of Goods.
- Chapter 7 Excess and Deficit.
- Chapter 8 Calculation by Square Tables.
- Chapter 9 Right angled triangles.
17- Let us leave the problem to whoever can tell the
truth.
18The Ten Mathematical Classics
- The Sui dynasty was short lived, lasting from 581
to 618, but it was important in unifying a
country which had been divided for over 300
years. Education became important and mathematics
was taught at the Imperial Academy. The T'ang
dynasty, which followed the Sui dynasty,
continued the educational development which had
already begun and formalised the teaching of
mathematics. - Li Chunfeng together with Liang Shu, an expert in
mathematics from the ministry of education, and
Wang Zhenru, a teacher from the national
university and others were ordered by imperial
decree to annotate the ten mathematical texts
such as the Wucao suanjing or the Sunzi suanjing.
Once their task was completed the Emperor Kao-tsu
ordered that these books be used at the National
University. - Although called The Ten Mathematical Classics by
later writers, there were more than ten books in
the collection assembled by Li Chunfeng.
19The Ten Mathematical Classics
- Zhoubi suanjing (Zhou Shadow Gauge Manual)
- Jiuzhang suanshu (Nine Chapters on the
Mathematical Art) - Haidao suanjing (Sea Island Mathematical Manual)
- Sunzi suanjing (Sun Zi's Mathematical Manual)
- Wucao suanjing (Mathematical Manual of the Five
Administrative Departments) - Xiahou Yang suanjing (Xiahou Yang's Mathematical
Manual) - Zhang Qiujian suanjing (Zhang Qiujian's
Mathematical Manual) - Wujing suanshu (Arithmetic methods in the Five
Classics) - Jigu suanjing (Continuation of Ancient
Mathematics) - Shushu jiyi (Notes on Traditions of Arithmetic
Methods) - Zhui shu (Method of Interpolation)
- Sandeng shu (Art of the Three Degrees Notation
of Large Numbers)
20- The way that mathematics was taught at the
Imperial Academy was as follows. Thirty students
were recruited from the lower ranks of society
and divided into two classes each of 15 students.
These two classes followed a different syllabus,
with one class studying more basic practical
mathematics while the other was the advanced
class studying techniques. Teaching was done by
doctors of mathematics and their assistants. The
students spent seven years studying mathematics
from The Ten Mathematical Classics and then took
the civil service examinations. Examinations were
held once a year and, as one would expect, they
were different for the two classes. Questions
taken from the texts had to be solved, and oral
examinations were held for the advanced class in
which the students had to complete sentences
taken at random from these Ten Mathematical
Classics. To pass the examinations a score of 6
out of ten had to be achieved.
21Sources
- Katz, V. 2007
- http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
/Chinese_overview.html - http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
/Chinese_numerals.html - http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
/Ten_classics.html - http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics
/Nine_chapters.html