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Contributions to the History of Indian Mathematics
 
Edited by: G. G. Emch University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
R. Sridharan Chennai Mathematical Institute, Chennai, India
M. D. Srinivas Centre for Policy Studies, Chennai, India
A publication of Hindustan Book Agency
Contributions to the History of Indian Mathematics
Hardcover ISBN:  978-81-85931-58-6
Product Code:  HIN/27
List Price: $62.00
AMS Member Price: $49.60
Please note AMS points can not be used for this product
Contributions to the History of Indian Mathematics
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Contributions to the History of Indian Mathematics
Edited by: G. G. Emch University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
R. Sridharan Chennai Mathematical Institute, Chennai, India
M. D. Srinivas Centre for Policy Studies, Chennai, India
A publication of Hindustan Book Agency
Hardcover ISBN:  978-81-85931-58-6
Product Code:  HIN/27
List Price: $62.00
AMS Member Price: $49.60
Please note AMS points can not be used for this product
  • Book Details
     
     
    Hindustan Book Agency
    Volume: 272005; 300 pp
    MSC: Primary 01

    This volume resulted from the first Joint India–AMS meeting in Mathematics held in Bangalore. One of its themes was the "History of Indian Mathematics". The refereed articles in the book were written by invited speakers and cover a wide spectrum of topics, ranging from Vedic Prosody and ancient Buddhist logic to the contributions of Srinivasa Ramanujan and Indian contributions to quantum statistics.

    The first section, which deals with the ancient period, has two articles, one on Vedic Prosody and the work of Pingala and the other on Buddhist Logic.

    The next section which discusses the mathematics of the classical and medieval periods begins with two articles, one on the work of Brahmagupta on Bhavana and its applications, another on the contributions of Bhaskara II to the mathematics of Karani or surds. The next article is on the use of power series techniques by the medieval Kerala School of Mathematics. The next two articles focus on the nature of algorithms in Indian Mathematics and Astronomy. The final article of this section is on the notion of proofs in Indian Mathematics and the tradition of Upapattis in Mathematics and Astronomy of India.

    The third section is devoted to the modern period. The first article points to some surprising contributions of Srinivasa Ramanujan on partial fractions while the second surveys the history of some of the contributions of Indian mathematicians to Quantum Statistics.

    A publication of Hindustan Book Agency; distributed within the Americas by the American Mathematical Society. Maximum discount of 20% for all commercial channels.

    Readership

    Graduate students and research mathematicians.

  • Requests
     
     
    Review Copy – for publishers of book reviews
    Accessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
Volume: 272005; 300 pp
MSC: Primary 01

This volume resulted from the first Joint India–AMS meeting in Mathematics held in Bangalore. One of its themes was the "History of Indian Mathematics". The refereed articles in the book were written by invited speakers and cover a wide spectrum of topics, ranging from Vedic Prosody and ancient Buddhist logic to the contributions of Srinivasa Ramanujan and Indian contributions to quantum statistics.

The first section, which deals with the ancient period, has two articles, one on Vedic Prosody and the work of Pingala and the other on Buddhist Logic.

The next section which discusses the mathematics of the classical and medieval periods begins with two articles, one on the work of Brahmagupta on Bhavana and its applications, another on the contributions of Bhaskara II to the mathematics of Karani or surds. The next article is on the use of power series techniques by the medieval Kerala School of Mathematics. The next two articles focus on the nature of algorithms in Indian Mathematics and Astronomy. The final article of this section is on the notion of proofs in Indian Mathematics and the tradition of Upapattis in Mathematics and Astronomy of India.

The third section is devoted to the modern period. The first article points to some surprising contributions of Srinivasa Ramanujan on partial fractions while the second surveys the history of some of the contributions of Indian mathematicians to Quantum Statistics.

A publication of Hindustan Book Agency; distributed within the Americas by the American Mathematical Society. Maximum discount of 20% for all commercial channels.

Readership

Graduate students and research mathematicians.

Review Copy – for publishers of book reviews
Accessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
Please select which format for which you are requesting permissions.