History of Mathematical Notation
History of Mathematical Notation
History of Mathematical Notation
Includes Hindu-Arabic numerals, letter from Romans, Greek, Hebrew and German
alphabets; and a host of symbols invented by mathematicians over the past several
centuries.
Mathematical Notation
Notation
Stages:
1. Rhetorical Stage calculations are performed by words and no symbols are used
2. Syncopated Stage frequently used operations and quantities are represented by
symbolic syntactical abbreviations
3. Symbolic Stage comprehensive systems of notation supersede rhetoric
ANCIENT GREECE
The first mathematical symbols for arbitrary quantities appeared much later in Greece
Arbitrary quantities (areas, volumes, angles) were represented by the lengths and lines
and the product of two such quantities was represented a rectangle with sides
representing the respective factors
In Euclids elements:
Quantities were denoted by two letters, the initial and final letters of the
corresponding segment, and sometimes by one letter
Thanks to the liberation of algebra from its geometric setting, the rudiments of letter
notation and calculus appeared
INDIAN MATHEMATICS
Introduced various mathematical symbols for several unknowns, the square, the square
root, and the subtrahend
RENAISSANCE
The creation of modern algebraic symbols dates to the 14th 15th centuries
Symbols for various operations and for powers of an unknown quantity appeared
spontaneously in different countries
At the end of 15th century N. Chuquet and L. Pacioli were using the symbols p and m
for addition and subtraction, respectively
As late as 17th century, one could count about ten different symbols for multiplication
Leonardo Pisano (Leonardo da Pisa 1220) and up to the 17th century the symbol RR
(from the Latin radix) was widely employed for square root
In a German manuscript of ca. 1480 was denoted by a dot before the number, the
cube root by the three dots, and the fourth root by two dots
Mathematical symbols for an unknown quantity and its powers were highly diverse
In the 16th century and early 17th century, more than ten rival notations were current
for just one square unknown; among these were:
ce for census
Q for quadratum
zz, ii1, A, 12, Aii, aa, a2, etc.
Mathematician
Contribution
Vite
Descartes
INFINITESIMAL CALCULUS
Mathematician
Leibniz
Contribution
creator of modern notation for
(the base
The role of notation became even more important as new fields of mathematics were
opened up, scholar endeavored to standardize the basic symbols
K. Weierstrass, 1841
x
v
A. Cauchy, 1853
a1b1a2b2
A. Cayley, 1841
Many of the new theories, such as tensor calculus, could not have been developed
without suitable notation
membership
isomorphism
equivalence
CLASSIFICATION OF SYMBOLS
A. Symbols for Objects
The notation for natural numbers (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9)
The transcendental numbers
and