PIMS - UVictoria Math Colloquium: Piers Bursill-Hall
Topic
So where exactly did algebra come from? Hint: they didn't tell you the truth.
Speakers
Details
The Arab mathematician al-Khwarizmi is usually said to be the 'father of algebra', or otherwise that 'the Arabs invented algebra'. There is probably nothing in the previous sentence that is true (except the 'usually'). It turns out that the traditional story is just intellectually, mathematically, and culturally lazy. A little bit of thinking about the original texts, the mathematics, and a little bit of historical context leads to a much more problematic, culturally rich, and technically subtle story. We still don't know the whole story – there is lots of room for further research, if you have the languages – and a lot of room for thinking about past mathematics (and by symmetry present day mathematics) as existing in a rich, complex social and intellectual matrix, and not just as a succession of correct theorems. The story might even involve the Sogdians, and you have never heard of them!​
Additional Information
Register in advance for this meeting through the link here. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.​
Meeting time: 1:00pm Pacific
Piers Bursill-Hall, Cambridge
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Distinguished Lecture
Date
March 19, 2021
Time
-
Location