In 1202, a 32-year old Italian finished one of
the most influential books of all time, which introduced
modern arithmetic to Western Europe. Devised in India in
the seventh and eighth centuries and brought to North
Africa by Muslim traders, the Hindu-Arabic system helped
transform the West into the dominant force in science,
technology, and commerce, leaving behind Muslim cultures
which had long known it but had failed to see its
potential. The young Italian, Leonardo of Pisa
(better known today as Fibonacci), had learned the Hindu
number system when he traveled to North Africa with his
father, a customs agent. The book he created was
Liber abbaci, the 'Book of Calculation', and the
revolution that followed its publication was enormous.
Arithmetic made it possible for ordinary people to
buy and sell goods, convert currencies, and keep
accurate records of possessions more readily than ever
before. Liber abbaci's publication led directly
to large-scale international commerce and the scientific
revolution of the Renaissance. Yet despite the ubiquity
of his discoveries, Leonardo of Pisa remains an enigma.
His name is best known today in association with an
exercise in Liber abbaci whose solution gives
rise to a sequence of numbers - the Fibonacci sequence -
used by some to predict the rise and fall of financial
markets, and evident in myriad biological structures. In
The Man of Numbers, Keith Devlin recreates the life and
enduring legacy of an overlooked genius, and in the
process makes clear how central numbers and mathematics
are to our daily lives.
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