Yeah, I read a very persuasive book about that, and I was persuaded. 

Joanna 

----- Original Message -----
By the way, writing originated from accounting, again in the same 
region, and possibly in Egypt also, about the same time, if not a bit 
earlier. That is, this finance and accounting have been with us for 
millennia; since the beginning of agricultural production. There is no 
production without finance and accounting. 

Best, 
Sabri 

On Fri, Jun 29, 2012 at 8:00 PM, Sabri Oncu <[email protected]> wrote: 
> Joanna: 
> 
>> The first mention of the natural logarithm was by Nicholas Mercator in his 
>> work Logarithmotechnia published in 
>> 1668, [ 2 ] although the mathematics teacher John Speidell had already in 
>> 1619 compiled a table on the natural 
>> logarithm. [ 3 ] It was formerly also called hyperbolic logarithm, [ 4 ] as 
>> it corresponds to the area under a hyperbola . 
>> It is also sometimes referred to as the Napierian logarithm , although the 
>> original meaning of this term is slightly different. 
>> 
>> ??? 
> 
> Much earlier than that. Goes back to Babylonia of BC 2000s. The 
> formula (1+r/n)^(nt) is how much you will pay back to your lender t 
> years later if your interest rate is r per year and interest is 
> compounded n times a year. The number "e" originated from debt/finance 
> in Mesopotamia about 4000-5000 years ago. Babylonians knew about 
> logarithms then, although not exactly in the same way we now know. It 
> was not science, it was finance from which the exponential function 
> originated. 
> 
> Best, 
> Sabri 
_______________________________________________ 
pen-l mailing list 
[email protected] 
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l 
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to