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“The book is bound to be useful to school-going children, teachers, scholars, historians and those working for the cause of mathematics.”
In 1150 AD, Bhaskaracarya (b. 1114 AD), renowned mathematician and astronomer of Vedic tradition composed Lilavati as the first part of his larger work called Siddhanta Siromani, a comprehensive exposition of arithmetic, algebra, geometry, mensuration, number theory and related topics. Lilavati has been used as a standard textbook for about 800 years. This lucid, scholarly and literary presentation has been translated into several languages of the world. Bhaskaracarya himself never gave any derivations of his formulae. N.H. Phadke (1902-1973) worked hard to construct proofs of several mathematical methods and formulae given in original Lilavati. The present work is an enlargement of his Marathi work and attempts a thorough mathematical explanation of definitions, formulae, short cuts and methodology as intended by Bhaskara. Stitches are followed by literal translations so that the reader can enjoy and appreciate the beauty of accurate and musical presentation in Lilavati. The book is useful to school going children, sophomores, teachers, scholars, historians and those working for the cause of mathematics.
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Subjects
Indian Mathematics, Mathematics, Mathematics, IndianTimes
Early works to 1800Showing 1 featured edition. View all 1 editions?
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1
Lilavati of Bhaskaracary.: With Vasana of Damodara Mishra. Edited by Dayanatha Jha.
1959, Mithila Institute of Post-graduate Studies and Research in Sanskrit Learning
in English
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