Misplaced Pages

Ten Computational Canons

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Ten Computational Canons ( traditional Chinese : 算經十書 ; simplified Chinese : 算经十书 ) was a collection of ten Chinese mathematical works dating from pre- Han dynasty to early Tang dynasty , compiled by the early Tang mathematician Li Chunfeng (602–670) in the 650s, as the official mathematical texts for imperial examinations in mathematics.

#23976

5-729: In 1084 during the Northern Song dynasty, the text Shushu Jiyi was selected to be part of this collection, replacing Zhui Shu . Thus Shushu Jiyi has appeared in the subsequent issuing of the catalogue. The original Ten Computational Canons includes: It was specified in Tang dynasty laws on examination that Sunzi Suanjing and the Computational Canon of the Five Administrative Sections together required one year of study; The Nine Chapters on

10-734: The Zhoubi Suanjing , The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art , Haidao Suanjing , Sunzi Suanjing , Zhang Qiujian Suanjing , Computational Canon of the Five Administrative Sections , Xiahou Yang Suanjing , Computational Prescriptions of the Five Classics , Jigu Suanjing , and Shushu Jiyi from the Yongle Encyclopedia and transferred them into another encyclopedia, the Complete Library of

15-625: The Four Treasuries . Shushu Jiyi Shushu Jiyi (數術記遺; translated as Notes on Traditions of Arithmetic Methods , Memoir on the Methods of Numbering or Notes on Traditions of Arithmetic Method ) is a Chinese mathematical treatise written by the Eastern Han dynasty mathematician Xu Yue . The text received a subsequent commentary by Zhen Luan in the 6th century. The text mentions 14 methods of calculation, and it

20-467: The Mathematical Art plus Haidao Suanjing three years; Jigu Suanjing three years; Zhui Shu four years; and Zhang Qiujian and Xia Houyang one year each. The government of the Song dynasty actively promoted the study of mathematics. There were two government xylograph editions of The Ten Computational Canons in the years 1084 and 1213. The wide availability of these mathematical texts contributed to

25-862: The flourishing of mathematics in the Song and Yuan dynasties, inspiring mathematicians such as Jia Xian , Qin Jiushao , Yang Hui , Li Zhi and Zhu Shijie . In the Ming dynasty during the reign of the Yongle Emperor , some of the Ten Canons were copied into the Yongle Encyclopedia . During the reign of the Qianlong Emperor in the Qing dynasty , scholar Dai Zhen made copies of

#23976