The Universal History of Numbers: From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer

by Georges Ifrah

Other authorsDavid Bellos (Translator), Ian Monk (Translator), E. F. Harding (Translator), Sophie Wood (Translator)
Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

513.2

Collection

Publication

John Wiley & Sons (2000), Edition: 1st, Paperback, 656 pages

Description

Chronicles the history of counting and calculating from the time of cave dwellers to the late twentieth century, examining how different cultures used numbers to solve basic problems related to their everyday needs.

User reviews

LibraryThing member fpagan
633-page masterwork, translated from the 1994 French edition.
LibraryThing member hcubic
I have to admit that I haven't finished reading this book. With over six hundred, large-format pages and relatively small type, it would probably not have made "Hal's Picks" until next year if I had waited until I had completed it. However, it is entirely possible to dip in for a chapter here and a
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chapter there. No matter where you peruse, you will find information about number systems and their history that you didn't know beforehand. This book was instigated by the questions of schoolchildren to their teacher, Georges Ifrah: "Where do numbers come from?" "Who invented zero?" In striving to answer those questions, he found himself on a quest through history and ethnology that resulted in this monumental piece of scholarship. It is a reminder that the frontiers of human knowledge are not far beyond the most naive question.
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LibraryThing member keylawk
Born speaking Hebrew Arabic and French in Morocco, and widely-traveled, Georges Ifrah provides a comprehensive tour of how "numbers" were used by people across expanses of time, place and culture. He shows that the Hand is a computer-calculator [xiv], and was used as such by the Cave Painting
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inhabitants of Europe. [xiii]

Ifrah also explains many numerical oddities. Why do we still use Roman Numerals (especially in dates, e.g. film credit crawls)? If we have ten fingers, why do clocks have 60 minute hours? Why did Lincoln count by 20s in his Gettysburg Address? How did the Inca count using Quipu sticks and knots on a string?

Our "Arabic" numeral forms only migrated from southern India about 1,500 years ago. And now we see the numerals shared by humanity.

"For all our differences, we are united by this great system of symbols." Ifrah explains:

"By their universality...figures bear witness, better than the babel of languages, to the underlying unity of human culture. When we consider them, our awareness of the prodigious and fruitful diversity of societies and histories gives way to a feeling of almost absolute continuity. Though they are only one part of human history, they bind it together, sum it up, and run through it from one end to the other, like that red thread which, according to Goethe, ran through all the ropes of the British navy, so that one could not cut a piece from any of them without recognizing that it belonged to the Crown." [xvi]

"Figures are profoundly human".
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LibraryThing member br77rino
Man, what a great find. I've been wanting a collection like this, chock-full of illustrations, for some time now. And, bonus, it's a big book (the 2000 edition) but printed on this great thick but lightweight paper, so despite its size it's a light book.

In the first chapter, all the numeric writing
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systems are gathered and compared (with the glaring exception of Asia, though the Mayan somewhat represents it).
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LibraryThing member johninBurnham
Very detailed and concentrated text. Many illustrations and examples. A good read, but a hard read.
LibraryThing member mykl-s
Counting and numbers and arithmetic from all over the world and all time periods.

Language

Original publication date

1981 (first French edition)
1994 (revised French edition)
1998 (English translation by Bello, Harding, Wood, Monk)

Physical description

656 p.; 9.52 x 9 inches

ISBN

0471393401 / 9780471393405
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