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.epub 8th Class Maths Textbook Ap State Syllabus Rar Book Download

  • tiobaterdatima
  • Nov 19, 2021
  • 2 min read






































The Arithmetic Book is a book of elementary mathematics. It was written by Jean-Baptiste Sarrus in France in the 17th century. The Arithmetic Book is one of the most influential textbooks of its time, preceding modern books on arithmetic such as Isaac Newton's 1687 book A Short Treatise on Algebra, which laid out how to teach arithmetic to children. Despite being limited to only working with whole numbers and doing calculations without fractions, this text was so popular that it eventually became a reference for all other mathematical texts produced in Europe during the following centuries. Its great popularity led to its translation into many languages, among them English and Latin. The Arithmetic Book addressed itself to an audience of children from primary school all the way up to university. It is remarkable because it relies on ideas from trigonometry, algebra and geometry, presenting these topics in a simple and clear manner that can be understood by a child. The first edition was published in 1647 by Pierre Troisgros at Paris. The third edition was published in 1653 at Paris with a dedication by Isaac Newton to the child of the king of England, Charles II. In this edition it was dedicated as ""To His Majesty's most Excellent Highness King Charles II"". In 1656 a French translation was published by Claude Bonfons, a French mathematician and philosopher. The dedication contained a reference to "." A second English translation was done by John Clarke in 1660 and it became the first arithmetic book to be printed in America, being published in Boston. It had a forty-two page appendix containing tables of logarithms designed especially for navigators and surveyors. This edition also had the reference to "Newton's Arithmetick" without using either words "The" or "Mr." . In 1672 Johann Heinrich Lambert published at Bensberg an English translation, as well as a Latin translation and a German one. In 1703 John Wallis published at Oxford his Arithmetica Universalis, which marked the beginning of logarithms as it introduced the symbol √. A new edition was published by Louis Brial in 1823. The last edition was published by G. and A.D. Pertinet in Paris in 1890 and it contained a preface by Paul Gaston Fournier and An early history of arithmetic, including Descartes, Pascal, Leibniz etc.. This book is no longer used as a pedagogical tool for teaching arithmetic. The Arithmetic Book is written in the form of a dialog between an abbot and a novice monk. The abbot explains to the novice that six and seven are equal to eleven and that eight times nine is forty-two. The text goes on to explain how to multiply, divide and multiply by fractions with decimals and percents with commas instead of decimal points. 1: Fournier, P., "History of Arithmetic", translated by John Clarke, 1660, printed in Boston (MA), Massachusets Bay Company Press. cfa1e77820

 
 
 

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