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[...]... symbolize thenumber two, clover-leaves three, the legs of an animal four, the fingers on his own hand five Evidence of this origin ofnumber words can be found in many a primitive languageOf course, once thenumber word has been created and adopted, it becomes as good a model as the object it originally represented The necessity 8 NUMBERof discriminating between the name ofthe borrowed object and the number. .. invited to examine the table at the end ofthe chapter where thenumber words ofthe standard Indo-European languages are compared Why is it then that in spite of this stability no trace ofthe original meaning is found? A plausible conjecture is that while number words have remained unchanged since the days when they originated, the names ofthe concrete objects from which thenumber words were borrowed... which produced the men T xviii NUMBER Can the fundamental issues of thescienceof number be presented without bringing in the whole intricate apparatus of the science? This book is the author’s declaration of faith that it can be done They who read shall judge! Tobias Dantzig Washington, D.C May 3, 1930 CHAPTER 1 Fingerprints Ten cycles ofthe moon the Roman year comprised: This number then was held... all mathematics and which has received the name of one-to-one correspondence It consists in assigning to every object of one collection an object ofthe other, the process being continued until one ofthe collections, or both, are exhausted Thenumber technique of many primitive peoples is confined to just such such a matching or tallying They keep the record of their herds and armies by means of notches... that there were enough lay readers interested in such issues to justify the publication of the book The reception accorded to the work both here and abroad, and the numerous books on the same general theme which have followed in its wake have dispelled these doubts The existence of a sizable body of readers who are concerned with the cultural aspects of mathematics and of the sciences which lean on mathematics... and present the evolution ofnumber as the profoundly human story which it is This is not a book on the history ofthe subject Yet the historical method has been freely used to bring out the rôle intuition has played in the evolution of mathematical concepts And so the story ofnumber is here unfolded as a historical pageant of ideas, linked with the men who created these ideas and with the epochs which... metamorphosis As to the structure ofthenumber language, philological researches disclose an almost universal uniformity Everywhere the ten fingers of man have left their permanent imprint Indeed, there is no mistaking the influence of our ten fingers on the “selection” ofthe base of our number system In all IndoEuropean languages, as well as Semitic, Mongolian, and most primitive languages, the base of numeration... every member a term in the natural sequence in ordered succession until the collection is exhausted The term ofthe natural sequence assigned to the last member ofthe collection is called the ordinal numberofthe collection The ordinal system may take the concrete form of a rosary, but this, of course, is not essential The ordinal system acquires existence when the first few number words have been... advances in technology, the spread ofthe statistical method, the advent of electronics, the emergence of nuclear physics, and, above all, the growing importance of automatic computors— have swelled beyond all expectation the ranks of people who live on the fringes of mathematical activity; and, at the same time, raised the general level of mathematical education Thus was I A xvi NUMBER confronted not... than the one I had addressed twenty odd years earlier These sobering reflections had a decisive influence on the plan of this new edition As to the extent I was able to meet the challenge of these changing times—it is for the reader to judge Except for a few passages which were brought up to date, the Evolution oftheNumber Concept, Part One ofthe present edition, is a verbatim reproduction ofthe . would borrow the best of geometry and of algebra and correct all the faults of the one by the other.” The contempo- rary mathematician Sir Michael Atiyah, in comparing the glories of geometric. aware of the prodigious changes that have taken place since the last edition of the book appeared. The advances in technology, the spread of the statistical method, the advent of electronics, the. in particular behind the sentiments of the essay of Wigner. Dantzig treads around this lightly. My brother Joe and I gave our father, Abe, a copy of Number: The Language of Science as a gift when