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Eves, Howard. On the Practicality of the Rule of False Position. Mathematics Teacher 51 (1958), 606--8.
Eves shows how the method of false position can be simpler than our own methods by giving one example from the Ahmes Papyrus, three from the Greek Anthology of c. 500 AD, and two of his own. One of his examples is from surveying, and Eves says that it is the method a surveyor would probably use. In the other example of his own, he likens the rule of false position to the method of similitude in geometric constructions. Reprinted in Swetz, Frank J., From Five Fingers to Infinity. Closely related topics: Ancient Egypt, Medieval Europe, Surveying, and Geometry.Modify notes on this entry Modify bibliography entry Make comment on this entry
Lumpkin, Beatrice. From Egypt to Benjamin Banneker: African origins of false position solutions. Vita mathematica (Toronto, ON, 1992; Quebec City, PQ, 1992), 279--289, MAA Notes, 40, Math. Assoc. America, Washington, DC, 1996. SC: 01A05 (01A13), MR: 1 391 748.
Discusses the work of the Benjamin Banneker, who is perhaps the most interesting early American mathematician. The author gives a fine introduction to Banneker's life; this is necessarily brief, because as the author observes, his house burned down on the day of his funeral, destroying almost all his papers. She notes that there were hints of his genius starting with his building of a wood clock at the age of 22 (he used a borrowed pocket watch as a model; unfortunately, the clock was destroyed in the fire); he thereafter became famous for his ability to solve and create mathematical puzzles. "People sent him puzzles from all over the colonies and later from the new republic." His work became more serious when he was 57 and borrowed some books and astronomy instruments from a neighbor. He taught himself the mathematics he needed to become an astronomer, and published local almanacs including things such as the planetary positions and the times of sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset, eclipses, and tides. "Based on Banneker's work on his almanac, he was appointed an astronomer on the team of surveyors that drew up the outline for the new nation's capital, Washington, DC. Banneker was appointed because he was one of the few in the country capable of doing such work. Charles Leadbetter, author of an astronomy book that Banneker studied, wrote that knowledge of astronomy in London was 'so rare, ... not one of 20,000 hath attained to it.' Knowledge of astronomer", Lumpkin continues, "was even rarer in the new United States. Banneker's work so impressed Thomas Jefferson, then Secretary of State, that he wrote Banneker that he was sending a copy of the almanac to the Paris Academy of Sciences." Most amazing of all is that Banneker accomplished all this as an African American who had spent most of his life thus far hard physical labor. After this introduction, the author focuses on how Banneker and other mathematicians used the rule of false position. She notes, the rule of false position was used by the Egyptians in the time of the Rhind Papyrus and in a variety of other Egyptian sources (e.g., the Kahun and Berlin papyri), in the work of Alexandrian Greeks like Diophantus (c. 250 AD), in the work of Islamic mathematicians such as Abu Kamil (b. 850 AD), and in the work of the mathematician Leonardo of Pisa (Fibonacci) (who was also influenced by the work in Northern Africa). The author then discusses some interesting false position problems from Banneker's own work. Closely related topics: Benjamin Banneker, The Rhind/Ahmes Papyrus, Ancient Egypt, Diophantus, Abu Kamil (b. 850), and Leonardo of Pisa (Fibonacci).Modify notes on this entry Modify bibliography entry Make comment on this entry
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