A Brief Introduction to Ancient Counting Systems For The Non-Mathematician
by David Cycleback
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About This Book
Written by a prominent artifact historian, this booklet is a short introduction and beginner's guide to historical counting systems, including Ancient Egyptian, Inuit, Greek, Hindu, Babylonian, Chinese and Mayan. This primer is intended for the non mathematician, so the reader can learn to read and understand numerals in several languages. The book does not go into advanced calculations.
Our Review
This concise guide offers an accessible entry point into the diverse world of ancient counting systems, from Egyptian hieroglyphs to Mayan vigesimal math. Authored by an experienced artifact historian, it bypasses complex calculations to focus on a practical, foundational skill: learning to read and understand numerals across seven major historical cultures. The book demystifies the symbols and logic of Babylonian, Greek, and Chinese systems, making numerical archaeology approachable for anyone.
Its commitment to the complete beginner strips away the intimidation factor often associated with historical mathematics. Readers with an interest in ancient civilizations, anthropology, or the history of communication will find its direct, artifact-focused approach particularly rewarding. By the final page, you'll not only grasp the basics of Inuit tallying but also gain a new lens for understanding how ancient societies quantified their world.
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