Mathematics of the Incas : Code of the Quipu
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The Incas of ancient Peru possessed no writing. Instead, they developed a unique system expressed on spatial arrays of colored knotted cords called quipus to record and transmit information throughout their vast empire. The present book is based on a firsthand study of actual quipus that survived the destruction of the Inca civilization. Written by a mathematician and an anthropologist, this book acquaints the reader with the cultural context of the quipus, the problem of interpreting artifacts from another culture, and the place of the quipu-maker in Inca culture. Although no previous mathematical knowledge is assumed, the reader is introduced to the mathematical ideas embedded in the quipus and learns how to make a quipu.
Enhanced with over 125 illustrations, this unusual and thought-provoking study will interest mathematicians, historians, anthropologists, archeologists, and students of folk art with its unique perspective on the way in which pieces of colored string serve to embody a rich, logical, numerical tradition and are, ultimately, a metaphor for the civilization that created them. Preface. Exercises and answers within chapters.
Unabridged republication of the book Code of the Quipu: A Study in Media, Mathematics and Culture, first published 1981.
TitelMathematics of the Incas : Code of the Quipu
UdgivelsesstedNew York
UdgiverDover
Udgivelsesår1997
Pagineringx, 166 p.
IllustrationerIllus., black and white drawings and diagrams, black and white photographs
Mål20.5 x 20.4 cm
Materialebook
F3429.3.Q6 .A83 1997
ISBN0-486-29554-0
NoterDes Pawson Collection
Emnemathematics, Quipu, knots and splices, ropes, Incas
Geografisk søgeordPeru