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MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE MATHEMATICS BY: Tajana Novak, Andrea Gudelj, Sr đ ana Obradović, Mirna Marković April, 2013.
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MEDIEVAL MATHEMATICS From the 4th to the 15th centuries the early Middle Ages or Dark Ages (from 4 00AD to 1 4 00AD) period of stagnation the late Middle Ages (just before the Renaissance) spreading the knowledge from the East
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MEDIEVAL MATHEMATICIANS Adelard of Bath, Herman of Carinthia, Gerard of Cermona – translated Euclid’s “Elements” Robert of Chester – translated Al- Khwarizmi’s book into Latin Leonardo of Pisa (Fibonacci)- Europe’s first great medieval mathematician -Hindu-Arabic numeral system (Liber Abaci, 1202 AD) -horizontal bar notation for fractions -first recursive number sequence -Liber Quadratorum, 1225 AD
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Woman teaching geometry The frontispiece of an Adelard of Bath Latin translation of Euclid's Elements, the oldest surviving Latin translation of the Elements is a 12th- century translation by Adelard from an Arabic version.
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MEDIEVAL MATHEMATICIANS Nicole Oresme – used a system of rectangular coordinates -harmonical series is a divergent infinite series Johann Müller (Regiomontatus)- trigonometry -De Triagulis, in 1450’s, first great book of trigonometry
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RENAISSANCE MATHEMATICS began in Italy From 14th to 16th century new way of thinking concept of ‘zero’ many advancements in algebra
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RENAISSANCE MATHEMATICIANS Leonardo da Vinci - exploration of the world of proportionality and spatial mechanics - preferred drawing as his primary tool to execute his studies -eg: rhombicuboctahedron, Leonardo's Vitruvian man's perfect mathematical proportions
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RENAISSANCE MATHEMATICIANS Albercht Durer- supermagic square Luca Pacioli- late 15th and early 16th centuries - Summa de Arithmetica, Geometria, Proportioni et Propotiionalita, 1494. – a book of arithmetic, geometry and book-keeping - symbols for plus and minus – standard notation -The Divine Proportion
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RENAISSANCE MATHEMATICIANS Niccolo Fontana Tartaglia- formula for solving cubic equations, complex numbers Ludovico Ferrari- quadratic equations Gerolamo Cardano- Ars Magna,1545 -first systematic treatment of probability Rafael Bombelli – L’Algebra,1572 –imaginary numbers Simon Stevin- De Thiende, 1585- decimal notation
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