▲ | TravisPeacock 8 months ago | |||||||
Just a fun aside: Islam is responsible for the foundations of algebra and the al in algorithm is of the same Arabic root. I'm not an Imam but I feel like if someone wanted to justify using a Western created algorithm they could just say "well technically this is just built on our initial work" | ||||||||
▲ | barbazoo 8 months ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> Islam is responsible for the foundations of algebra I don't think that's true. Algebra has history that goes way back to Babylonian times, long before Islam. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_algebra > The origins of algebra can be traced to the ancient Babylonians,[6] who developed a positional number system that greatly aided them in solving their rhetorical algebraic equations. The Babylonians were not interested in exact solutions, but rather approximations, and so they would commonly use linear interpolation to approximate intermediate values.[7] One of the most famous tablets is the Plimpton 322 tablet, created around 1900–1600 BC, which gives a table of Pythagorean triples and represents some of the most advanced mathematics prior to Greek mathematics.[8] Islam is much more recent than that. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam#History > Muhammad and the beginning of Islam (570–632) | ||||||||
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▲ | red_admiral 7 months ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
The funniest thing I read this week was the results of a poll asking "reds" whether schools in the US should teach Arabic numbers. Islam is, in fact, responsible for the first known treatise on cryptanalysis of simple substitution ciphers. One technique is assuming a letter begins "In the name of Allah" and working out letter values from there; another technique is counting letters, noting that alif and lam are the most frequent ones. | ||||||||
▲ | impossiblefork 8 months ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
No. The algebra of Al-Khwarizmi is almost certainly a pale reflection of Indian mathematics, probably stuff invented by people like Bhāskara II and Brahmagupta. Then there's Diophantus. |