B. L. van der Waerden (1903–1996)
Author of Sources of Quantum Mechanics
About the Author
Image credit: By Unbekannt - This image is from the collection of the ETH-Bibliothek and has been published on Wikimedia Commons as part of a cooperation with Wikimedia CH. Corrections and additional information are welcome., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=59410619
Series
Works by B. L. van der Waerden
Modern Algebra 2 copies
Sources of quantum mechanics; edited with a historical introduction by B. L. van der Waerden (1968) 1 copy
Mathematische Statistik 1 copy
Algebra 1 copy
Modern Algebra, Vol. II 1 copy
Modern algebra 2 [...] 1 copy
Modern Algebra, Vol. I 1 copy
Modern Algebra, Volume I 1 copy
Moderne Algebra 1 copy
Modern Algebra, Volume II 1 copy
The birth of astronomy 1 copy
Modern Algebra Vol 2 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Waerden, Bartel Leendert van der
- Birthdate
- 1903-02-02
- Date of death
- 1996-01-12
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Amsterdam University
Göttingen University - Occupations
- mathematician
- Organizations
- University of Groningen
University of Leipzig
University of Zurich - Awards and honors
- Carl B. Allendoerfer Award (1977)
- Nationality
- Netherlands
- Birthplace
- Amsterdam, Netherlands
- Places of residence
- Amsterdam, Netherlands
Zurich, Switzerland - Place of death
- Zürich, Switzerland
- Associated Place (for map)
- Amsterdam, Netherlands
Members
Reviews
A fantastic book on Babylonian, Egyptian and Greek math history for mathematically inclined readers, translated from Dutch in 1954. You will learn the odd yet intuitively natural ways in which they performed their calculations. It's chock full of wonderful images of Egyptian, Babylonian and Greek mathematics, including cuneiform, hieroglyphics, hieratics, all thoroughly translated (trans-numerated?) in modern mathematical symbols. Apparently the publisher hired an archaeologist to come up show more with a host of pictures, which are just stunning as a collection in and of themselves.
The ancient Egyptian command of the mathematics of fractions, using their inverse-heavy symbology, is amazingly impressive. And it turns out the Pythagorean theorem is fundamentally not Pythagorean, but Babylonian, as is evidenced by the lists of 'Pythagorean triples' the Babylonians calculated and kept.
(Also, there is a wonderful picture of a 15th century BC Egyptian sculpture of a humorously happy 15th century BC scribe, the mathematician of the day.)
Great, great book, stuck in the basement of my local library. I'm so glad the librarian said "Here. You might like this." show less
The ancient Egyptian command of the mathematics of fractions, using their inverse-heavy symbology, is amazingly impressive. And it turns out the Pythagorean theorem is fundamentally not Pythagorean, but Babylonian, as is evidenced by the lists of 'Pythagorean triples' the Babylonians calculated and kept.
(Also, there is a wonderful picture of a 15th century BC Egyptian sculpture of a humorously happy 15th century BC scribe, the mathematician of the day.)
Great, great book, stuck in the basement of my local library. I'm so glad the librarian said "Here. You might like this." show less
קראתי רק ברפרוף וגם שם רק את הקטעים המעניינים אותי
Dec 10, 2011Hebrew
Lists
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Statistics
- Works
- 42
- Members
- 401
- Popularity
- #60,557
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 57
- Languages
- 4












