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Reviews for Studies in the History of Indian Philosophy An Anthology of Articles by Scholars Eastern and...

 Studies in the History of Indian Philosophy An Anthology of Articles by Scholars Eastern and... magazine reviews

The average rating for Studies in the History of Indian Philosophy An Anthology of Articles by Scholars Eastern and... based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2015-01-27 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Ryan Ladouceur
This collection of essays is simply superb. I read the first one "The World the Mine Owners Made" as an undergraduate in the 1980s and it transformed my views of South African history. Social history then at times can be dry, with the "humanity baked out of it" as one old professor of mine once remarked. This is social history as it should be, brimming with people and personalities and artful prose. Johannesburg in Van Onselen's rendering is "fathered by gold and mothered by money." These essays, from different vantage points, chart the way that deep-level gold mining triggered an industrial revolution and class conflict in the dry grasslands of the high veld. We meet pimps from New York, prostitutes from Eastern Europe and the exploited African peasants from Mozambique who would go on for decades to provide the backbone of cheap labour that mitigated the high capital costs of deep-level, often low-grade mining. There are also bootleggers aplenty in this saga, and I find myself thirsting for more ...
Review # 2 was written on 2015-04-09 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Denise Glanton
7/29-Today I read 2 essays about Newton and one about Gauss, as well as some of The Geometry by Descartes and and an analysis of infintesmals by Bishop Berkeley. Although the beauty of getting drawn into trying to understand the notations and drawings has its allure, it is really the biographical information that I am looking for in order to hook my students. The most singular fact about Newton and Gauss seems to be their ability to hold problems in their head for long periods of time. Most of the information about Newton I already had from the fabulous book, The Calculus Wars--I think more stuff about his work for the Mint would interest my students though. I learned more about Gauss this morning, and Bell's excellent essay made me want to learn more about him. Nature of Mathematics by Jourdain The following ideas for class discussions. Why did Descartes invent the notation of analytic Geometry? Why do we say -6 but not +6? (This is one that my students struggle with all the time. A definition of the tangent as given by the Greeks "a straight line through the point such that between it and the curve no other straight line can be drawn." And a great lesson activity for between. The Great Mathematicians by Robert Turnbull Napier spending 25 years on his log tables, I can't even get my students to spend 25 minutes on log problems. Must look at Napier's spherical trigonometry. Newton considered Euclid's elements a trifling work. And perhaps my favorite thought of the day describing light as either undulatory or copuscular. The Rhind Papyrus by James R. Newman--didn't really grab me. Observations on Archimedes by Plutarch and others. The 3 different stories about his death and by remembrance of the Dutch puzzle and Descartes reminds me that I must share the nerdswiped xkcd comic with my students. Maybe on the syllabus. Read a bit on The Greek Mathematics, which was incredibly dull, than a good essay on Kepler by Locke. No crazy new teaching ideas.


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