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The Algebra of Mohammed ben Musa

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Perspectives from the Royal Asiatic Society series
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Mohammed ben Musa (c.780-c.850) was a Persian mathematician and astronomer.

The word 'algebra' derives from his Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing, which introduced modern algebraic methods.

First published in 1831, this translation from Arabic into English was prepared by the German orientalist Friedrich August Rosen (1805-37).

The key algebraic methods introduced are reduction, completion and balancing.

To reduce an equation is to change an expression to a simpler form; completion is to remove a negative quantity from one side of the equation and add it to the other; and balancing is to cancel like terms on opposite sides of the equation.

An account is also given of solving polynomial equations up to the second degree.

Rosen's introduction and notes accompany the translation, which remains relevant in the history of mathematics.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108055079 / 9781108055079
Paperback / softback
510.9
28/03/2013
United Kingdom
350 pages, 20 Line drawings, unspecified
140 x 216 mm, 440 grams
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