Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning. / Middeke-Conlin, Robert William.

Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences. ed. / Christine Proust. Springer, 2024. (Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Middeke-Conlin, RW 2024, Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning. in C Proust (ed.), Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences. Springer, Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter.

APA

Middeke-Conlin, R. W. (Accepted/In press). Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning. In C. Proust (Ed.), Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences Springer. Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter

Vancouver

Middeke-Conlin RW. Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning. In Proust C, editor, Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences. Springer. 2024. (Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter).

Author

Middeke-Conlin, Robert William. / Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning. Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences. editor / Christine Proust. Springer, 2024. (Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter).

Bibtex

@inbook{854551f1ae95413694f1bcc5806e9e5d,
title = "Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning",
abstract = "By the Old Babylonian period, that is, the early second millennium BCE in Southern Iraq, some administrations began to produce texts in a tabular format, instead of a more common prosaic format. This recordkeeping practice, which had been used sporadically since the Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia (early- to mid-third millennium BCE), was a significant change in data presentation. At the same time, numerous Old Babylonian mathematical texts took on a tabular format as well. Reading these texts, one wonders, {\textquoteleft}How do these tabular texts from the Old Babylonian period represent mathematical reasoning?{\textquoteright}This paper begins to answer this question by examining both mathematical texts that take on or present a tabular format as well as tables and tabular lists in the administrative record. It asks, {\textquoteleft}how do the tabular texts from the Old Babylonian mathematical tradition portray mathematical reasoning?{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}do the Old Babylonian tabular economic texts maintain a tabular format to express mathematical reasoning?{\textquoteright}, and finally, {\textquoteleft}is mathematical reasoning in the economic texts expressed in a similar manner as in the mathematical texts?{\textquoteright}",
author = "Middeke-Conlin, {Robert William}",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
series = "Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter",
editor = "Christine Proust",
booktitle = "Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences",
publisher = "Springer",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Tabular administrative texts as a reflection of mathematical reasoning

AU - Middeke-Conlin, Robert William

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - By the Old Babylonian period, that is, the early second millennium BCE in Southern Iraq, some administrations began to produce texts in a tabular format, instead of a more common prosaic format. This recordkeeping practice, which had been used sporadically since the Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia (early- to mid-third millennium BCE), was a significant change in data presentation. At the same time, numerous Old Babylonian mathematical texts took on a tabular format as well. Reading these texts, one wonders, ‘How do these tabular texts from the Old Babylonian period represent mathematical reasoning?’This paper begins to answer this question by examining both mathematical texts that take on or present a tabular format as well as tables and tabular lists in the administrative record. It asks, ‘how do the tabular texts from the Old Babylonian mathematical tradition portray mathematical reasoning?’, ‘do the Old Babylonian tabular economic texts maintain a tabular format to express mathematical reasoning?’, and finally, ‘is mathematical reasoning in the economic texts expressed in a similar manner as in the mathematical texts?’

AB - By the Old Babylonian period, that is, the early second millennium BCE in Southern Iraq, some administrations began to produce texts in a tabular format, instead of a more common prosaic format. This recordkeeping practice, which had been used sporadically since the Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia (early- to mid-third millennium BCE), was a significant change in data presentation. At the same time, numerous Old Babylonian mathematical texts took on a tabular format as well. Reading these texts, one wonders, ‘How do these tabular texts from the Old Babylonian period represent mathematical reasoning?’This paper begins to answer this question by examining both mathematical texts that take on or present a tabular format as well as tables and tabular lists in the administrative record. It asks, ‘how do the tabular texts from the Old Babylonian mathematical tradition portray mathematical reasoning?’, ‘do the Old Babylonian tabular economic texts maintain a tabular format to express mathematical reasoning?’, and finally, ‘is mathematical reasoning in the economic texts expressed in a similar manner as in the mathematical texts?’

M3 - Book chapter

T3 - Why the Sciences of the Ancient World Matter

BT - Practices of Reasoning in the Mathematical Sciences

A2 - Proust, Christine

PB - Springer

ER -

ID: 276166512