Islamic Mathematics and Mathematicians: Al-Hikma (House of Wisdom), Which Would Last More Than 200 Years
Islamic Mathematics and Mathematicians: Al-Hikma (House of Wisdom), Which Would Last More Than 200 Years
Islamic Mathematics and Mathematicians: Al-Hikma (House of Wisdom), Which Would Last More Than 200 Years
1 Introduction
The torch of ancient learning passed first to one of the invading groups
that helped bring down the Eastern Empire. Within a century of Muham-
mad’s conquest of Mecca, Islamic armies conquered lands from north-
ern Africa, southern Europe, through the Middle East and east up to
India. The empire was immense, rivaling that of Rome itself. Though
the Arabs initially focused on conquest, nonetheless to them ancient
science became precious treasure. The Qur’an, the sacred book of Is-
lam, praised medicine as an art close to God. Astronomy and astrology
were believed to be a pathway to discover God’s will. Within a century
of that the Caliphate split up into several parts. The eastern segment,
under the Abbasid caliphs, became a center of growth, of luxury, and
of peace. In 766 the caliph al-Mansur founded his capitol in Baghdad
and the caliph Harun al-Rashid, established a library. The stage was
set for his successor, Al-Ma’mum.
In the 9th century Al-Ma’mum established Baghdad as the new center
of wisdom and learning. He establihed a research institute, the Bayt
al-Hikma (House of Wisdom), which would last more than 200 years.
Al-Ma’mum was responsible for a large scale translation project of
translating as many ancient works as could be found. Greek manuscripts
were obtained through treaties. By the end of the 9th century, the major
works of the Greeks had been translated2 . In addition, they learned the
mathematics of the Babylonnians and the Hindus. The Arabs did not
stop with assimilation. They innovated and criticized. They absorbed
Babylonian and Greek astronomy and constructed large scale astronom-
ical observatories and made measurements against which predictions of
Ptolemy could be checked. Numbers, particularly numbers as used in
algebra fascinated the Islamic mathematicians. Surely, if one measures
Islamic mathematics against the ancients, it would be in algebra where
their originality and depth is most clearly evident.
1 2000,
c G. Donald Allen
2 Interestingly,
most of the translations were done from Greek and Syriac by Christian scholars, with
support Muslim patrons. These included the caliph and wealthy individuals
What follows is a brief introduction to a few of the more prominent
Arab mathematicians, and a sample of their work in more or less chrono-
logical order. Observe the progression of their mathematics over five
century of labor. One should not underestimate the importance of the
Islamic world for the preservation of ancient learning.
The illustration below shows the same famous figure from Euclid’s
Elements in ancient Arabic translation.
2
2 Abu Ja’far Muhammad ibn Musa Al-Khwarizmi(790 - 850)
Algebra Algorithm
His book Al-jabr wál Mugabala, on algebra, was translated into Latin
and used for generations in Europe.
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• It is strictly rhetorical – even the numerals are expressed as words.
And it is more elementary than Arithmetica by Diophantus.
• It is a practical work, by design, being concerned with straight-
forward solutions of deterministic problems, linear and especially
quadratic.
• Chapters I–VI covers cases of all quadratics with a positive solu-
tion in a systematic and exhaustive way.
• It would have been easy for any student to master the solutions.
Mostly he shows his methods using examples – as others have
done.
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iceberg. Islamic mathematics and mathematicians is a very active area
of mathematics, one that will reveal much much more that the mere
sketch we have today.
3.1 Shuja ibn Aslam ibn Muhammad ibn Shuja (c. 850 - 930)
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century Muhammad Baqir Yazdi gave the pair 9,363,584 and 9,437,056.
Theorem. (Generalization of Pythagorean Theorem.) From the vertex A
of ΔABC, construct B and C so that AB B = AC C = A
Then |AB| + |AC| = |BC|(|BB | + |C C|)
2 2
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3.4 Mohammad Abu’l-Wafa al’Buzjani
been argued to contain the first proof containing the two elements of induction.
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3.6 Omar Khayyam (1048 - 1122)
Omar Khayyam’s full name was Abu al-Fath Omar ben Ibrahim al-
Khayyam and was born in what is now modern Iran. A literal translation
of his name means ’tent maker’ and this may have been his fathers trade.
Khayyam is best known as a result of Edward Fitzgerald’s popular
translation in 1859 of nearly 600 short four line poems, the Rubaiyat.
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work Khayyam discusses Pascal’s triangle but the Chinese may have
discussed triangle slightly before this date.
The algebra of Khayyam is geometrical, solving linear and quadratic
equations by methods appearing in Euclid’s Elements.
Samarkand and gave it to Ulugh Beg. He was primarily an astronomer and he built an observatory, the
construction beginning in 1428. In his observations he discovered a number of errors in the computations of
Ptolemy. He compiled tables of sines and tangents at one minute intervals. These displayed high accuracy,
being correct to at least 8 decimal places. Alas, Ulugh Beg’s politics were not up to his science and, on
his father’s death, he was unable to achieve power despite being an only son. He was eventually put to
death at the instigation of his own son.
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decimal fractions. In fact, he gives 2π correctly as
6.2831853071795865
x = f(x)
we define the iteration
xn+1 = f(xn )
where x0 is some initial “guess”. If the iterations converge, then it must
be a solution of the equation. Such a method is called a fixed point
iteration. Another more famous fixed point iteration coming much later
is Newton’s Method
f (xn )
xn+1 = xn − .
f(xn )
x2 + 252x − 5292 = 0.
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1. If y ≈ 0 then y 2 is even closer to zero, and this term may be taken
as zero, giving the approximate solution
143
y=
290
so that x = 19 143
290
.
2. We may also factor the equation as
y 2 + 290y − 143 = 0
y(y + 290) − 143 = 0.
Letting the y in the parentheses be 1, solve for the other to get
hence the approximation
143
y=
291
so that x = 19 143
291
.
Clearly the first is slightly too large, while the second is slightly too
small. Which should be selected? al’Kashi selects the second, y = 143 291
.
Why?
After Al-Kashi, Arabic mathematics closes as does the whole Muslim
world. But scholarship in Europe at this time was on the up-swing.
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