Arabic mathematics
Recent research paints a new picture of the debt that we
owe to Arabic/Islamic mathematics. Certainly many of the
ideas which were previously thought to have been brilliant
new conceptions due to European mathematicians of the sixteenth,
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries are now known to have
been developed by Arabic/Islamic mathematicians around four
centuries earlier. In many respects the mathematics studied
today is far closer in style to that of the Arabic/Islamic
contribution than to that of the Greeks.
There is a widely held view that, after a brilliant period
for mathematics when the Greeks laid the foundations for
modern mathematics, there was a period of stagnation before
the Europeans took over where the Greeks left off at the
beginning of the sixteenth century. The common perception
of the period of 1000 years or so between the ancient Greeks
and the European Renaissance is that little happened in
the world of mathematics except that some Arabic translations
of Greek texts were made which preserved the Greek learning
so that it was available to the Europeans at the beginning
of the sixteenth century.
That such views should be generally held is of no surprise.
Many leading historians of mathematics have contributed
to the perception by either omitting any mention of Arabic/Islamic
mathematics in the historical development of the subject
or with statements such as that made by Duhem in:-
... Arabic science only reproduced the teachings received
from Greek science.
Before we proceed it is worth trying to define the period
that this article covers and give an overall description
to cover the mathematicians who contributed. The period
we cover is easy to describe: it stretches from the end
of the eighth century to about the middle of the fifteenth
century. Giving a description to cover the mathematicians
who contributed, however, is much harder. The works are
on "Islamic mathematics", which uses the title
the "Muslim contribution to mathematics". Other
authors try the description "Arabic mathematics",
see for example and. However, certainly not all the mathematicians
we wish to include were Muslims; some were Jews, some Christians,
some of other faiths. Nor were all these mathematicians
Arabs, but for convenience we will call our topic "Arab
mathematics".
The regions from which the "Arab mathematicians"
came was centred on Iran/Iraq but varied with military conquest
during the period. At its greatest extent it stretched to
the west through Turkey and North Africa to include most
of Spain, and to the east as far as the borders of China.
The background to the mathematical developments which began
in Baghdad around 800 is not well understood. Certainly
there was an important influence which came from the Hindu
mathematicians whose earlier development of the decimal
system and numerals was important. There began a remarkable
period of mathematical progress with al-Khwarizmi's work
and the translations of Greek texts.
This period begins under the Caliph Harun al-Rashid, the
fifth Caliph of the Abbasid dynasty, whose reign began in
786. He encouraged scholarship and the first translations
of Greek texts into Arabic, such as Euclid's Elements by
al-Hajjaj, were made during al-Rashid's reign. The next
Caliph, al-Ma'mun, encouraged learning even more strongly
than his father al-Rashid, and he set up the House of Wisdom
in Baghdad which became the centre for both the work of
translating and of of research. Al-Kindi (born 801) and
the three Banu Musa brothers worked there, as did the famous
translator Hunayn ibn Ishaq.
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