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Numerical Notation
A Comparative History

  • Date Published: March 2010
  • availability: Available
  • format: Hardback
  • isbn: 9780521878180

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  • This book is a cross-cultural reference volume of all attested numerical notation systems (graphic, non-phonetic systems for representing numbers), encompassing more than 100 such systems used over the past 5,500 years. Using a typology that defies progressive, unilinear evolutionary models of change, Stephen Chrisomalis identifies five basic types of numerical notation systems, using a cultural phylogenetic framework to show relationships between systems and to create a general theory of change in numerical systems. Numerical notation systems are primarily representational systems, not computational technologies. Cognitive factors that help explain how numerical systems change relate to general principles, such as conciseness or avoidance of ambiguity, which apply also to writing systems. The transformation and replacement of numerical notation systems relates to specific social, economic, and technological changes, such as the development of the printing press or the expansion of the global world-system.

    • An encyclopaedic reference volume whose scope vastly exceeds that of any similar work
    • Interdisciplinary and will appeal to anthropologists, archaeologists, linguists, historians of science, mathematicians, and cognitive scientists
    • Its wide geographical and chronological focus make it valuable for scholars in regional and area studies (East Asian, Near Eastern, African Studies, etc)
    • Presents the study of numerals in its anthropological and historical context, rather than simply as a mathematical or linguistic technical endeavour
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    Reviews & endorsements

    'Stephen Chrisomalis's Numerical Notation is an extraordinary book, comprehensively assembling information about a central human mode of notation, which is more widespread than writing systems and yet has never been fully explored. The author, who writes in an exceptionally lucid style, also offers cogent interpretations of the patterns that he identifies.' John Baines, University of Oxford

    'Numbers are necessary to reasoned human existence yet largely unconsidered by those who use them. This important book brings together, in a polished and erudite presentation, the latest thoughts on the origins, development, meanings, and theories of numbers. Few people could have pulled off such a study. That Chrisomalis has done so speaks to the magisterial authority of the volume and its fresh views on the cultural basis and historical contours of quantification.' Stephen Houston, Brown University, Rhode Island

    'In this extraordinary and unprecedented book, Stephen Chrisomalis succeeds in doing for numerical notations what the great theorists of the last generation – Gelb, Diringer, and Cohen – did for written language, providing an account that is encyclopedic in scope, conceptually rich, and explanatorily adequate to account for the origins, the transformations, the social uses, and the psychological implications of the world's remarkable systems for the notation of number.' David Olson, author of The World on Paper and University Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto

    'What this study has done is to remove the history of numerical notation from an outdated unilinear evolutionary scheme and place it in a new framework that puts no stock in progressivism as an inexorable consequence of history. It seems to me that no future work of numeral notation will be able to ignore this study. The detailed analysis and typology offered here, as well as the theoretical and interpretational exposition, sets a standard for future discussion of numerical notation as a social, technological, and cognitive phenomenon.' Francesca Rochberg, University of California, Berkeley

    'Stephen Chrisomalis's Numerical Notation is a work of extraordinary scholarship and erudition. The author guides the reader on an informed and highly engaging survey of number naming systems around the world, from the cuneiform sexagesimal numeration of ancient Mesopotamia to the Indian-derived decimal numeration of much of the modern world. Along the way, Chrisomalis explores a host of intriguing intellectual historical questions relating to not just how different societies have met the challenges of classifying and naming quantities, but other matters of broad linguistic, philosophical, and anthropological interest. This book is destined to become a standard reference work in the field for many years to come.' Gary Urton, Harvard University, Massachusetts

    'In not quite five hundred … dense but exceptionally clearly written pages, the young anthropologist Stephen Chrisomalis has managed to produce what would be for most people a crowning achievement of a life in scholarship: a monograph that is both astonishing in its comprehensiveness and careful about detail; that is both a work of reference and something that can be picked up and read, whether in whole or in part; that is both theoretical and data-driven; and that is simultaneously polemical in its attitudes and illuminating in its analyses.' Joshua T. Katz, Journal of the American Oriental Society

    'Chrisomalis's historical accounts are always impeccably clear … he provides all kinds of fascinating historical and cultural tidbits.' Ernest Davis, SIAM News

    'Numerical Notation is a masterly work - comprehensive, authoritative, and methodologically rigorous. It will be a cornerstone in the study of number systems for years to come.' Amir Alexander, Comparative Studies in Society and History

    'Chrisomalis writes clearly and concisely. He has an excellent sense of balance and great methodological awareness - unlike some of the extant literature on the subject. He has produced, in my view, the definitive account of numerical notation for some time to come.' Serafina Cuomo, Antiquity

    '… a substantial achievement in the intersection of the history of mathematics with anthropology.' Grattan Guinness, Annals of Science

    'Numerical Notation: A Comparative History will remain a key reference text for years to come.' G. E. R. Lloyd, Isis

    'By any standards, Stephen Chrisomalis's book is an illuminating work of extraordinary and unseen scholarship and it will certainly become the reference in the field for many years to come.' Jean-Claude Martzloff, Zentralblatt MATH

    'This extraordinary book sheds new light on an often-simplified area. Linguists, anthropologists, historians, philosophers, and mathematicians would be well advised to read this delightful book … Highly recommended.' R. L. Pour, Choice

    'Numerical Notation: A Comparative History is an important contribution to the study of the history and structure of numerical systems. It is well-written, well-edited, and packed with information. This book is an essential component of any college library and will be a well-thumbed reference for historians of mathematics.' James V. Rauff, Mathematics and Computer Education

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    Product details

    • Date Published: March 2010
    • format: Hardback
    • isbn: 9780521878180
    • length: 496 pages
    • dimensions: 236 x 161 x 35 mm
    • weight: 0.79kg
    • contains: 33 b/w illus. 166 tables
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    1. Introduction
    2. Hieroglyphic systems
    3. Levantine systems
    4. Italic systems
    5. Alphabetic systems
    6. South Asian systems
    7. Mesopotamian systems
    8. East Asian systems
    9. Mesoamerican systems
    10. Miscellaneous systems
    11. Cognitive and structural analysis
    12. Social and historical analysis
    13. Conclusion.

  • Author

    Stephen Chrisomalis, Wayne State University, Michigan
    Stephen Chrisomalis is currently an assistant professor of anthropology at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. He completed his PhD at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, where he studied under the late Bruce Trigger. His doctoral dissertation (on which this book is founded) was awarded the Prix de l'ADESAQ for the top 2003 dissertation in any arts, social sciences, or fine arts discipline in the province of Quebec. His work has appeared in journals including Antiquity, Cambridge Archaeological Journal, and Cross-Cultural Research. He is the editor of the Stop: Toutes Directions project and the author of the academic weblog Glossographia.

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