Online registration is closed for this event. If available, tickets on the day of the event may incur an additional charge.

Ideas of Calculus in Islam and India

A four-week minicourse

Mondays, July 11 through August 4, at 6:30 pm ET (New York)

(in person)

This four session minicourse on the history of math will examine two brilliant precursors to calculus that were developed outside of Europe long before Newton and Leibniz.  We'll spend two sessions on Ibn al-Haytham's work on sums of integer powers (in tenth-century Egypt) and two sessions on Madhava's work on trigonometric series (in fourteenth-century India).

Prerequisites: some familiarity with calculus would be helpful, but the only essential requirement is comfort with high school algebra, geometry, and trigonometry.  We will closely follow the article "Ideas of Calculus in Islam and India" by Victor J. Katz.

Steve is a Professor of Applied Mathematics from Cornell University and an award-winning mathematician who will bring to the MoMath audience his unique brand of mathematical discourse, as featured in the New York Times blog and several popular books, including New York Times bestseller Infinite Powers.

Note that masks must be worn at all times inside the Museum and that all visitors ages five and up must show acceptable proof of full vaccination (two doses) against COVID-19.  (Note: MoMath does not accept digital images or photocopies of vaccination cards.)

When
July 11, 2022 6:30 pm to August 1, 2022 8:00 pm
Location
United States
Event Fee(s)
Registration
Event fee $200.00
Event fee plus $200 donation to support families in need $400.00