The Hindu-Arabic Numerals

audiobook

The Hindu-Arabic Numerals

by David Eugene Smith, Louis Charles Karpinski

EN·~5 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total

THE - HINDU-ARABIC NUMERALS

0:18

PREFACE

3:05

PRONUNCIATION OF ORIENTAL NAMES

3:24

THE HINDU-ARABIC NUMERALS - CHAPTER I

2:55:09

GINN AND COMPANY Publishers

0:01

ALGEBRA FOR BEGINNERS

1:33

GINN & COMPANY Publishers

0:01

BOOKS FOR TEACHERS

1:08

GINN AND COMPANY Publishers

0:01

TEXTBOOKS ON MATHEMATICS

2:30

Description

Even the most casual user of numbers rarely pauses to wonder how the simple symbols we write every day came to dominate commerce and science worldwide. This concise work uncovers the surprisingly recent acceptance of the Hindu‑Arabic system, tracing its journey from ancient Indian scholars through medieval Arab translators and finally into European markets. The narrative highlights the centuries‑long struggle against older notations, revealing why a “labor‑saving device” took almost a millennium to become universal. Readers will gain a fresh appreciation for the cultural crossroads that shaped the digits we now consider obvious.

The authors combine careful scholarship with clear explanations, drawing on sources from Sanskrit, Arabic, and early European texts. An accessible index and helpful pronunciation guide make the material approachable for students, teachers, and anyone curious about the mathematics of everyday life. By presenting the evidence without imposing a single theory, the book invites readers to explore the origins of our number system and understand its lasting impact on trade, education, and thought.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (297K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Newman, Chuck Greif, Keith Edkins and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images from the Cornell University Library: Historical Mathematics Monographs collection.)

Release date

2007-09-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

David Eugene Smith

David Eugene Smith

1860–1944

A pioneer of modern math education, this American scholar helped shape how mathematics was taught in schools and colleges. He also brought the subject’s past to life through widely read histories, textbooks, and translations.

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Louis Charles Karpinski

Louis Charles Karpinski

1878–1956

Best known for bringing the history of mathematics to life, this American scholar also built a second reputation as a historian of maps. His work linked classroom teaching, rare books, and early cartography in a way that still feels unusually wide-ranging.

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