BR comment --
My favorite Babylonian proverb is this one, I imagine first spoken by  a 
snooty
Babylonian scribe every inch the equal of the snootiest Oxford stuffed  
shirt
anyone can imagine, replete with nose in the air :  
" The scribe who does not know Sumerian, what kind of scribe is  he ? "

Pythagoras, a math genius? Not by Babylonian standards
 
By Laura Allsop for CNN 
December 17, 2010 9


 
 
(CNN) -- Over 1,000 years before Pythagoras was  calculating the length of 
a hypotenuse, sophisticated scribes in Mesopotamia  were working with the 
same theory to calculate the area of their farmland.  
Working on clay tablets, students would "write" out their math problems in  
cuneiform script, a method that involved making wedge-shaped impressions in 
the  clay with a blunt reed. 
These tablets bear evidence of practical as well as more advanced 
theoretical  math and show just how sophisticated the ancient Babylonians were 
with 
numbers  -- more than a millennium before Pythagoras and Euclid were doing 
the same in  ancient Greece. 
"They are the most sophisticated mathematics from anywhere in the world at  
that time," said Alexander Jones, a Professor of the History of the Exact  
Sciences in Antiquity at New York University. 
He is co-curator of "Before Pythagoras: The Culture of Old Babylonian  
Mathematics," an exhibition at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World 
 
in New York.  
 
 



"This is nearly 4,000 years ago and there's no other ancient culture at 
that  time that we know of that is doing anything like that level of work. It 
seems to  be going beyond anything that daily life needs," he said. 
Many scribes were trained in the ancient city of Nippur in what is now  
southern Iraq, where a large number of tablets were discovered between the  
mid-19th century and the 1920s. 
Typical problems they worked on involved calculating the area of a given  
field, or the width of a trench. 
These problems, says Jones, required the kind of math training taught to  
American Grade 10 students, but not in a format we would now recognize. 
"It's not like algebra, it's all written out in words and numerals but no  
symbols and no times signs or equals or anything like that," he said. 
This system, and the lack of recognizable Western mathematical symbols such 
 as x and y, meant that it was several years before historians and 
archaeologists  understood just what was represented on these tablets. 
It took a young Austrian mathematician in the 1920s, named Otto Neugebauer, 
 to crack the mathematical system and work out what the ancient Babylonians 
were  calculating. But despite his advances, it is only recently that 
interest in  Babylonian math has started to take hold. 
"I think that before Neugebauer and even after Neugebauer, there wasn't a 
lot  of attention placed on mathematical training in Babylon even though we 
have this  rich cuneiform history with the tablets," said Jennifer Chi, 
Associate Director  for Exhibitions and Public Programs at Institute for the 
Study of the Ancient  World. 
 
 



One of the aims of the institute, she says, is to find interconnections  
between ancient cultures as well as look at what the institute sees as  
under-represented ancient cultures -- and the culture of ancient Babylonian  
math, 
she says, is ripe for popular revision. 
"When we think of ancient mathematics, the first names that come to mind 
are  Pythagoras and Euclid," she said, but that "this shouldn't be the case." 
And though ancient Babylonia is often referred to in popular culture as a  
"lost" world, in fact much more evidence of mathematical learning from the  
period exists than from ancient Greece, said Chi. 
Jones of New York University believes that there is much more that could be 
 excavated but that, of course, current conditions in Iraq are not 
favorable.  Still, there are enough tablets in collections across the world for 
mathematical  historians to get stuck into. 
For non-mathematicians, these tablets are a fascinating document of life in 
 Mesopotamia. Most of the problems displayed are grounded in the everyday 
needs  of ancient Babylonians. 
But some tablets show the students engaging in what Jones calls 
"recreational  math" -- math for math's sake. 
"The only point of learning to do this kind of thing is really as a mental  
exercise, as a way of showing how smart you are," he said. 
And it seems there is still more to learn from the Babylonians. Duncan  
Melville is a Professor of Mathematics at St. Lawrence University in Canton, 
New  York, whose special interest is Mesopotamian mathematics.  
According to Melville, teachers can continue to learn a thing or two about  
the way math was taught in Mesopotamia.  
"You look at the way they set up their sequences of problems and it's all  
very carefully graduated, from simple problems to more complicated 
problems," he  said.  
"As a teacher of mathematics, it's very interesting to see how they 
organized  their material," he continued. "There's still interesting things to 
learn from  cutting-edge pedagogy 4,000 years ago."  
With research continuing into this strand of ancient history,  it remains 
to be seen whether Pythagoras's theorem will come to bear the name of  an old 
Babylonian scribe instead.

-- 
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