play and relax: games for kids games
  Cut the knot: learn to enjoy mathematics
A math books store at a unique math study site. Learn to enjoy mathematics.
Google
Web CTK
Try our no ads browsing

Best sites for teachers
Sites for teachers
Sites for parents
Terms of use
Awards

Interactive Activities
CTK Exchange
CTK Insights - a blog

Games & Puzzles
What Is What
Arithmetic/Algebra
Geometry
Probability
Outline Mathematics
Make an Identity
Book Reviews
Eye Opener
Analog Gadgets
Inventor's Paradox
Did you know?...
Proofs
Math as Language
Things Impossible
Visual Illusions
My Logo
Math Poll
Cut The Knot!
MSET99 Talk
Other Math sites
Front Page
Movie shortcuts
Personal info
Privacy Policy

Guest book
News sites

Recommend this site

Best sites for teachers
Sites for teachers
Sites for parents

Education & Parenting

Manifesto: what CTK is about Buying a book is a commitment to learning Table of content Try our no ads browsing Things you can find on CTK Chronology of updates Email to Cut The Knot Recommend this page

Napier Bones in Various Bases

John Napier (1550-1617), a Scottish mathematician, is mostly known for his invention of logarithms - a device that revolutionized calculations by reducing difficult and tedious multiplication to addition of table entries. In 1617, three years after appearance of Mirifici logarithmorum canonis descriptio (A Description of the Wonderful Law of Logarithms), he published Rabdologiae which was recently reproduced as Rabdology by the Charles Babbage Institute in the Reprint Series for the History of Computing. The Elementary Latin Dictionary offered two entries:

  1. Rab- - raving, mad, rage, be mad, ...
  2. Dolo - pike, pointed stuff, sword-stick, ...
(my son David who takes Latin in high school, claims that the last part logo has to do with the word "study".) The difficulty of putting the three together would explain why the Institute decided to anglicize the title instead of translating it. Trusting several accounts, it appears that in their day the sticks described in the book and later known as Napier's rods or Napier's bones, were indeed a rave among merchants who carried them along and used them to speed up calculations.

[Richard Persky from University of Texas diverges: Actually, it looks like Latinized Greek to me - rhabdos ("staff, stick") plus logos ("speech," "reason," "knowledge," "study" - it's a slippery little word with a broad range of meanings). So "Rabdologiae" would be the science of sticks, which seems a bit more reasonable than "the science of going berserk with a pointed object".]

Each bone is a multiplication table for a single digit. The digit appears at the top of its bone. Below one carves consecutive products of this digit by all non-zero digits in the system (decimal in Rabdology). Each product occupies a single cell. Digits in a 2-digit number are separated, the first is written above while the second below the bottom-left top-right diagonal. To multiply 187 by 3, put three bones corresponding to digits 1,8, and 7 alongside each other. The third row looks like

 

The product is evaluated diagonally,

  5 (= 3 + 2) 6 (= 4 + 2) 1, 187 × 3 = 561.

That simple. (Of course, from time to time you will have to carry 1.)

Among other wonderful things John Napier was also the discoverer of the binary system. So it's appropriate that in the applet below the base may change from 3 through 20.

 

This applet requires Sun's Java VM 2 which your browser may perceive as a popup. Which it is not. If you want to see the applet work, visit Sun's website at http://www.java.com/en/download/index.jsp, download and install Java VM and enjoy the applet.


Buy this applet
What if applet does not run?

References

  1. H.Eves, Great Moments in Mathematics Before 1650, MAA, 1983
  2. M.Gardner, Knotted Doughnuts, W.H.Freeman and Co, 1986

Copyright © 1996-2008 Alexander Bogomolny

29706906Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape


Search:
Keywords:


Latest on CTK Exchange
try this puzzle ?/?? + ?/?? + ?/? ...
Posted by albert1950
2 messages
03:40 PM, Aug-26-08

Numbers raised to the power of 0
Posted by Chris Tolley
20 messages
12:17 PM, Aug-25-08

Arbelos : 1) Geometrical Construc ...
Posted by Sundar Krishnan
12 messages
06:29 AM, Aug-12-08

concerning pi
Posted by Lloyd Marks
4 messages
08:25 AM, Aug-22-08

Triangles With Equal Area
Posted by Bui Quang Tuan
5 messages
07:20 PM, Aug-26-08

Coxeter Introduction to Geometry
Posted by WiZaRd
1 messages
09:15 AM, Aug-23-08

site questions
Posted by madisonv
2 messages
04:24 PM, Aug-26-08