This review of Reckonings shares our thoughts on the diverse insights presented by Stephen Chrisomalis’s version of the history of numerical notation. Chrisomalis suggests that members of distinct cultural groups write numbers as an active choice in accordance with their own sociocultural contexts, which reflect the influences of historical, cognitive, social, economic, political, environmental, and cultural factors. This book integrates comparative, cognitive, and evolutionary understandings on numerical cognition with historical and linguistic evidence on the use and transformation of numeral systems through the historical advancement of numeracy. Chrisomalis offers an interesting historical perspective on numbers that builds upon three m...
What a wizard wheeze! A set of computer programs to calculate any date in any calendar and convert b...
Yasukawa, K., Rogers, A., Jackson, K. and Street, B. (Eds) (2018) Numeracy as Social Practice: Globa...
This is the best textbook on statistical methods ever written for a historical audience, Realizing ...
I. Bernard Cohen, The Triumph of Numbers: How Counting Shaped Modern Life. (New York: W.W. Norton &...
A review of Geoffrey B. Saxe, Cultural Development of Mathematical Ideas. Saxe offers a comprehensiv...
Patrick Dunleavy reviews a fascinating, but flawed, history of democratic thinking from an American ...
Ellen Peters’s new book Innumeracy in the Wild: Misunderstanding and Misusing Numbers (Oxford Univer...
Yasukawa, K., Rogers, A., Jackson, K. and Street, B. (Eds) (2018) Numeracy as Social Practice: Globa...
Although England contained only a relative handful of "mathematically minded" men in 1700, American...
Reviewed Title: Reimer, David. Count LIke an Egyptian: A Hand-On Introduction to Ancient Mathematics...
Edited by Keiko Yasukawa, Alan Rogers, Kara Jackson and Brian Street Routledge, London and New York,...
Book review by Joseph A. P. Wilson. Kosmin, P. J. (2018). Time and Its adversaries in the Seleucid E...
Popular books on quantitative themes are seemingly more available than ever. In this book review, we...
A review of 'Cartographies of Time: a history of the timeline' by Daniel Rosenberg and Anthony Graft...
Book review of: John Hanson Mitchell, Ceremonial Time: Fifteen Thousand Years on One Square Mile (...
What a wizard wheeze! A set of computer programs to calculate any date in any calendar and convert b...
Yasukawa, K., Rogers, A., Jackson, K. and Street, B. (Eds) (2018) Numeracy as Social Practice: Globa...
This is the best textbook on statistical methods ever written for a historical audience, Realizing ...
I. Bernard Cohen, The Triumph of Numbers: How Counting Shaped Modern Life. (New York: W.W. Norton &...
A review of Geoffrey B. Saxe, Cultural Development of Mathematical Ideas. Saxe offers a comprehensiv...
Patrick Dunleavy reviews a fascinating, but flawed, history of democratic thinking from an American ...
Ellen Peters’s new book Innumeracy in the Wild: Misunderstanding and Misusing Numbers (Oxford Univer...
Yasukawa, K., Rogers, A., Jackson, K. and Street, B. (Eds) (2018) Numeracy as Social Practice: Globa...
Although England contained only a relative handful of "mathematically minded" men in 1700, American...
Reviewed Title: Reimer, David. Count LIke an Egyptian: A Hand-On Introduction to Ancient Mathematics...
Edited by Keiko Yasukawa, Alan Rogers, Kara Jackson and Brian Street Routledge, London and New York,...
Book review by Joseph A. P. Wilson. Kosmin, P. J. (2018). Time and Its adversaries in the Seleucid E...
Popular books on quantitative themes are seemingly more available than ever. In this book review, we...
A review of 'Cartographies of Time: a history of the timeline' by Daniel Rosenberg and Anthony Graft...
Book review of: John Hanson Mitchell, Ceremonial Time: Fifteen Thousand Years on One Square Mile (...
What a wizard wheeze! A set of computer programs to calculate any date in any calendar and convert b...
Yasukawa, K., Rogers, A., Jackson, K. and Street, B. (Eds) (2018) Numeracy as Social Practice: Globa...
This is the best textbook on statistical methods ever written for a historical audience, Realizing ...