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Plimpton 322

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The Plimpton 322 tablet.

Of the approximately half million Babylonian clay tablets excavated since the beginning of the 19th century, several thousand are of a mathematical nature. Probably the most famous of these examples of Babylonian mathematics is the tablet called Plimpton 322, referring to the fact that it has number 322 in the G.A. Plimpton Collection at Columbia University. This tablet, believed to have been written about 1800 BC, has a table of four columns and 15 rows of numbers in the cuneiform script of the period.

Though the table was formerly popularly interpreted by leading mathematicians as a listing of Pythagorean triples, the modern view published by the Mathematical Association of America is that this interpretation is no longer acceptable.[1] For readable popular treatments of this tablet see Robson (2002) or, more briefly, Conway and Guy (1996). Robson (2001) is a more detailed and technical discussion of the interpretation of the tablet's numbers, with an extensive bibliography.

Contents

[edit] Provenance and dating

Plimpton 322 is a partly broken clay tablet, approximately 13cm wide, 9cm tall, and 2cm thick. New York publisher George A. Plimpton purchased the tablet from an archaeological dealer, Edgar J. Banks, in about 1922, and bequeathed it with the rest of his collection to Columbia University in the mid 1930s. According to Banks, the tablet came from Senkereh, a site in southern Iraq corresponding to the ancient city of Larsa.[2]

The tablet is believed to have been written about 1800 BCE, based in part on the style of handwriting used for its cuneiform script: Robson (2002) writes that this handwriting "is typical of documents from southern Iraq of 4000–3500 years ago." More specifically, based on formatting similarities with other tablets from Larsa that have explicit dates written on them, Plimpton 322 can be dated to the period 1822–1784 BCE.[3] Robson points out that Plimpton 322 was written in the same format as other administrative, rather than mathematical, documents of the period.[4]

[edit] The numbers

The main content of Plimpton 322 is a table of numbers, with four columns and fifteen rows, in Babylonian sexagesimal notation. The fourth column is just a row number, in order from 1 to 15. The second and third columns are completely visible in the surviving tablet. However, the edge of the first column has been broken off, and there are two consistent extrapolations for what the missing digits could be; these interpretations differ only in whether or not each number starts with an additional digit equal to 1. With the differing extrapolations shown in parentheses, these numbers are:

(1:)59:00:15 1:59 2:49 1
(1:)56:56:58:14:50:06:15 56:07 1:20:25 2
(1:)55:07:41:15:33:45 1:16:41 1:50:49 3
(1:)53:10:29:32:52:16 3:31:49 5:09:01 4
(1:)48:54:01:40 1:05 1:37 5
(1:)47:06:41:40 5:19 8:01 6
(1:)43:11:56:28:26:40 38:11 59:01 7
(1:)41:33:45:14:03:45 13:19 20:49 8
(1:)38:33:36:36 8:01 12:49 9
(1:)35:10:02:28:27:24:26 1:22:41 2:16:01 10
(1:)33:45 45 1:15 11
(1:)29:21:54:02:15 27:59 48:49 12
(1:)27:00:03:45 2:41 4:49 13
(1:)25:48:51:35:06:40 29:31 53:49 14
(1:)23:13:46:40 56 1:46 15

It is possible that additional columns were present in the broken-off part of the tablet to the left of these columns. Conversion of these numbers from sexagesimal to decimal raises additional ambiguities, as the Babylonian sexagesimal notation did not specify the power of the initial digit of each number.

[edit] Interpretation

In each row, the number in the second column can be interpreted as the shortest side s of a right triangle, and the number in the third column can be interpreted as the hypotenuse d of the triangle. The number in the first column is either the fraction \tfrac{s^2}{l^2} or \tfrac{d^2}{l^2}, where l denotes the longest side of the same right triangle. Scholars still differ, however, on how these numbers were generated.

In 1951, Neugebauer had argued for a number-theoretic interpretation, pointing out that this table provides a list of (pairs of numbers from) Pythagorean triples. For instance, line 11 of the table can be interpreted as describing a triangle with short side 3/4 and hypotenuse 5/4, forming the side:hypotenuse ratio of the familiar (3,4,5) right triangle. If p and q are two coprime numbers, then ( p^2 - q^2,\, 2pq,\, p^2 + q^2 ) form a Pythagorean triple, and all Pythagorean triples can be formed in this way. For instance, line 11 can be generated by this formula with p = 1 and q = 1/2. As Neugebauer argues, each line of the tablet can be generated by a pair (p,q) that are both regular numbers, integer divisors of a power of 60. This property of p and q being regular leads to a denominator that is regular, and therefore to a finite sexagesimal representation for the fraction in the first column. Neugebauer's explanation is the one followed e.g. by Conway and Guy (1996). However, as Robson points out, Neugebauer's theory fails to explain how the values of p and q were chosen: there are 92 pairs of coprime regular numbers up to 60, and only 15 entries in the table. In addition, it does not explain why the table entries are in the order they are listed in, nor what the numbers in the first column were used for.

In 1995, Joyce provided a trigonometric explanation: the values of the first column can be interpreted as the squared cosine or tangent (depending on the missing digit) of the angle opposite the short side of the right triangle described by each row, and the rows are sorted by these angles in roughly one-degree increments. However, Robson argues on linguistic grounds that this theory is "conceptually anachronistic": it depends on too many other ideas not present in the record of Babylonian mathematics from that time.

In 2002, the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) published research by Robson rejecting earlier mathematical misconceptions of the tablet and pointing out that historical, cultural and linguistic evidence all reveal the tablet to be more likely "a list of regular reciprocal pairs."[5] In 2003, the MAA awarded Robson with the Lester R. Ford Award for her work, stating it is "unlikely that the author of Plimpton 322 was either a professional or amateur mathematician. More likely he seems to have been a teacher and Plimpton 322 a set of exercises."[6] Robson takes an approach that in modern terms would be characterized as algebraic, though she describes it in concrete geometric terms and argues that the Babylonians would also have interpreted this approach geometrically.

Robson bases her interpretation on another tablet, YBC 6967, from roughly the same time and place.[7] This tablet describes a method for solving what we would nowadays describe as quadratic equations of the form,

x-\tfrac1x=c,

by steps (described in geometric terms) in which the solver calculates a sequence of intermediate values v1 = c/2, v2 = v12, v3 = 1 + v2, and v4 = v31/2, from which one can calculate x = v4 + v1 and 1/x = v4 - v1.

Robson argues that the columns of Plimpton 322 can be interpreted as the following values, for regular number values of x and 1/x in numerical order:

v3 in the first column,
v1 = (x - 1/x)/2 in the second column, and
v4 = (x + 1/x)/2 in the third column.

In this interpretation, x and 1/x would have appeared on the tablet in the broken-off portion to the left of the first column. For instance, row 11 of Plimpton 322 can be generated in this way for x = 2.

Robson points out that the tablet reveals mathematical "methods -— reciprocal pairs, cut-and-paste geometry, completing the square, dividing by regular common factors -— [which] were all simple techniques taught in scribal schools" of that time period, and that its author appears to be familiar with the prevalent document formats used by "temple and palace administrators of Larsa" in that period.[8] Therefore, Robson argues that the author was likely not a student but more likely a "professional bureaucratic scribe" who knew the names of "about half a dozen ancient Mesopotamian teachers," all whom of which "had careers in temple administration."[9]

Finally, Robson notes that Plimpton 322 repeats "the same mathematical set-up fifteen times, each with a different group of well-behaved regular numbers." This, Robson points out, "would have enabled a teacher to set his students repeated exercises on the same mathematical problem, and to check their intermediate and final answers without repeating the calculations himself."[9] Therefore, though likely written by a bureaucrat, it is unlikely to have been written for bureaucrats, as "its organisational structure most closely resembles a class of school mathematics documents that we might call 'teachers’ problem lists.'" Robson points out that another similar tablet is BM 80209.[9]

Thus, the tablet can be interpreted as giving a sequence of worked-out exercises of the type solved by the method from tablet YBC 6967. It could, Robson suggests, have been used by a teacher as a problem set to assign to students.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Robson, Eleanor. "Words and Pictures: New Light on Plimpton 322," in American Mathematical Monthly, February 2002, 109, pp. 105–119. Mathematical Association of America.
  2. ^ Robson (2002), p. 109.
  3. ^ Robson (2002), p. 111.
  4. ^ Robson (2002), in American Mathematical Monthly, p. 110.
  5. ^ Robson (2002), in American Mathematical Monthly, p. 116.
  6. ^ The Mathematical Association of America. Retrieved February 24, 2009. [1].
  7. ^ Neugebauer, O.; Sachs, A. J. (1945). Mathematical Cuneiform Texts. American Oriental Series, vol. 29. New Haven: American Oriental Society and the American Schools of Oriental Research. text Ua. 
  8. ^ Robson (2002), in American Mathematical Monthly, pp. 117-118.
  9. ^ a b c Robson (2002), in American Mathematical Monthly, p. 118.

[edit] References

  • Bruins, Evert M. (1949). "On Plimpton 322, Pythagorean numbers in Babylonian mathematics". Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen Proceedings 52: 629–632. 
  • Bruins, Evert M. (1951). "Pythagorean triads in Babylonian mathematics: The errors on Plimpton 322". Sumer 11: 117–121. 
  • Neugebauer, O. (1951). The Exact Sciences in Antiquity (2nd ed.). Copenhagen: Munksgaard. Available as a Dover reprint, ISBN 978-0486223322. 
  • Robson, Eleanor (2001). "Neither Sherlock Holmes nor Babylon: a reassessment of Plimpton 322". Historia Math. 28 (3): 167–206. doi:10.1006/hmat.2001.2317. MR1849797. 

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