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         Bar Hiyya Abraham:     more books (25)
  1. The Meditation of the Sad Soul (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization) by Abraham Bar Hiyya Savasorda, 1984-06-21
  2. 12th-Century Mathematicians: Omar Khayyám, Adelard of Bath, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Al-Khazini, Bhaskara Ii, Sharaf Al-Din Al-usi
  3. Spanish Astrologers: Abraham Ibn Ezra, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Ibn Arabi, Abu Ishaq Ibrahim Al-Zarqali, Arnaldus de Villa Nova
  4. Medieval European Mathematics: Fibonacci, Alcuin, Adelard of Bath, Thomas Bradwardine, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Jordanus de Nemore, Abacus School
  5. 1136 Deaths: Harald Iv of Norway, William de Corbeil, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Gwenllian Ferch Gruffydd, Hugues de Payens, Leopold Iii
  6. Spanish Mathematicians: Abraham Bar Hiyya, Enrique Zuazua, José Celestino Mutis, David Ríos Insua, Esteban Terradas I Illa
  7. Jewish Astrologers: Abraham Ibn Ezra, Jewish Views on Astrology, Philip Berg, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Mashallah, Jackie Stallone, David Gans
  8. Translators to Hebrew: Arabic-hebrew Translators, Latin-hebrew Translators, Jacob Anatoli, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Reuven Snir, Joseph Kimhi
  9. La Obra Sefer Hesbon Kahlekot Ha-kokabim De R. Abraham Bar Hiyya Ha-Bargeloni. Edicion Critica, Con Traduccion Introduccion y Notas Por Jose M. Millas Vallicrosa by Jose M. Millas, Ed. Abraham Bar Hiyya Ha-Bargeloni. Vallicrosa, 1959
  10. Spanish Jews: Ricardo Bofill, Jehuda Cresques, Spanish and Portuguese Jews, Petrus Alphonsi, Gabriel Milan, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Judah Halevi
  11. Catalan Astronomers: Abraham Bar Hiyya, Josep Comas Solà, Dionís Renart, Lupitus of Barcelona, Jaume Nomen
  12. Spanish Astronomers: Petrus Alphonsi, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Josef de Mendoza Y Ríos, Abu Ishaq Ibrahim Al-Zarqali, Antonio de Ulloa
  13. La Obra Forma De La Tierra De R. Abraham Bar Hiyya ha-Bargeloni by Abraham Bar Hiyya Savasorda, 1956-01-01
  14. Judaism As A Philosophy : The Philosophy of Abraham Bar Hiyya (1065 - 1143) by Leon D. Stitskin, 1960

81. 2nd_to_4th.nb
The earliest record of the general quadratic solution is found in Liber Embadorum,written in 1145 CE by the Arab mathematician abraham bar hiyya HaNasi
http://www.pitt.edu/~jagst135/polynomial/quartic/
* root formulae taken from Polynomials and Polynomial Inequalities , by Borwein and Erdelyi.
Roots of the Quadratic Equation
Source: Although methods of solving quadratics were well-known since the time of the Babylonians, these early mathematicians lacked the modern notation of equations in order to express such solutions in a general formula. Rather, they relied on (geometric-based) algorithms, which have been found equivalent to the method of "completing the square."
The earliest record of the general quadratic solution is found in Liber Embadorum , written in 1145 C.E. by the Arab mathematician Abraham bar Hiyya Ha-Nasi (known as Savasorda). It differed from previous works, such as those of Al-Khwarizmi, which separated the problem into four cases, in order to avoid using negative quantities (a previous unknown).
In the modern setting, the quadratic formula is familiar to us from grade school. For the equation: a + bx + c = , the solutions take the following form:
x
This follows from the method of completing the square.
Roots of the Cubic Equation
Source: The context of this discovery is a murky one. The earliest record of a solution is found in

82. HistoryMole: The Calendar (0001-1972)
Links. 1079, Omar ibn Ibrahim alChajjam completes Jalali-calendar,Links. 1125, abraham bar hiyya ha-Nasi Jewish calendar, Links. 1345,
http://www.historymole.com/cgi-bin/main/results.pl?type=theme&theme=Calendar

83. October 2002
Rabbi Yohanan said to him, “Give me your hand.” Rabbi hiyya bar Abba stretched Weare taught in Genesis that God visited abraham while he recovered from
http://www.templeisaiah.net/rabbismessages/fromtherabbi0210.html
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FROM THE RABBI Rabbi Hiyya bar Abba fell ill and Rabbi Yohanan went in to visit him. Rabbi Yohanan said to him, “Does your suffering have meaning to you?” Rabbi Hiyya bar Abba replied, “Neither they nor their reward.” Rabbi Yohanan said to him, “Give me your hand.” Rabbi Hiyya bar Abba stretched out his hand and Rabbi Yohanan raised him up. (Babylonian Talmud, Berachot 5b) This short anecdote from the Talmud clearly illustrates the mitzvah of bikur cholim—visiting the sick. We are taught in Genesis that God visited Abraham while he recovered from his circumcision at age 90! In Numbers, after Miriam is afflicted with tza’ra’at (a white scaly skin affliction), Moses prays for her with the simple words, “El na refah na la”—please God, please heal her. Jews have long understood the need to visit the sick, which responds to two of the greatest burdens of contemporary life: isolation and lack of community. At a time of illness, bikur cholim offers us the comfort of human connection and interdependence, a sense of community we so desperately need. Our congregation has long had a Bikur Cholim Committee. Four years ago, with the help of Marjorie Sokol of Jewish Family and Children’s Services, I led a workshop to train volunteers to visit the sick and to understand the role of healing in the Jewish tradition. Under the wonderful and caring guidance of Bikur Cholim’s co-chairs—Nancy Hodin, Eileen Sussman, and Marilyn Zieve—this committee now has close to 30 trained volunteers who are ready, willing, and able to make visits and phone calls to those who are ill, lonely, and in need of healing. Like Rabbi Yohanan in the Talmudic tale, these volunteers know that their role is not necessarily to heal, but to lift the spirit of another.

84. The Ten Commandments
We take this path as outlined by the Ten Commandments and as explained bya littleknown sage, Rabbi abraham bar hiyya of eleventh-century Spain.
http://www.dfscott.com/bibal books/tencomm.asp
A Full Service Publisher - Quality Books at Reasonable Prices
The Ten Commandments
by Dennis S. Ross Two oval-topped tablets, standing side by side-everyone recognizes the religious symbol. But get to specifics-"You shall" and "You shall not"-it seems there is not much recognition at all. A recent public opinion survey discovered that most people cannot name more than a couple. And when the surveyors described the overlooked commandments, most participants were not happy with what they heard. Yet these "ten words" are the basis for Western ethics and law. Their influence permeates every niche of our society. In this book, Rabbi Ross presents the Ten Commandments as understood by Judaism, the religion of the people who gave them to the world. Indeed, the essence of the commandments is an outward reaching spirituality, not one that is self-absorbed. Judaism is a world engaging religion. The road to spiritual truth is not taken in isolation but is outward bound. We reach spiritual truth by engaging with the world, the family, and the community. The world is a good place, the human spirit is good, and worldly pleasures are to be enjoyed with moderation and within limits. Judaism teaches a unity of the spirit and the world. We take this path as outlined by the Ten Commandments and as explained by a little-known sage, Rabbi Abraham bar Hiyya of eleventh-century Spain. We learned that we cannot control our thoughts, but we can integrate our thinking and our doing. Speaking depends on nuance and is a way of engaging with family and community. We find a reasonable approach to honoring our parents and community, of caring for the weak and protecting strangers.

85. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = Neue Seite 1
Neue Seite 1 Abbe, Ernst (1840 - 1909). Abel, Niels Henrik (5.8.1802 - 6.4.1829).abraham bar hiyya (1070 - 1130). abraham, Max (1875 - 1922). Abu
http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=Neue Seite 1&brand=metacrawler

86. 5. Aragon. 2001. The Encyclopedia Of World History
the vernacular. abraham barhiyya (d. 1136) (Sarasorda) was one ofthe earliest to introduce Muslim mathematics to the West. Moses
http://www.bartleby.com/67/479.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference The Encyclopedia of World History g. The Iberian Peninsula 5. Aragon ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Encyclopedia of World History. 5. Aragon

87. Abraham's Discovery
R. hiyya said Terach was a manufacturer of idols. And God said to abraham, 'Youshall keep my covenant time teaching at Aish HaTorah and bar Illan University
http://aish.com/torahportion/moray/Abrahams_Discovery.asp
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Lech Lecha (Genesis 12-17)
Abraham's Discovery And God said to Abram: 'Go out from your country, from your birthplace, from the home of your father, to the land which I will show you ...' [Genesis 12:1] This Torah portion begins with the Divine directive to Abram (later to be known as Abraham) to leave his home for a destination unknown. Who was this man Abram and why was he chosen for this special directive? How had he merited God's attention? Why was he, of all people, destined to become the first of the patriarchs, the father of many nations? Regarding all these questions, the Torah is silent. Of course, the Midrashic literature ably fills in all the gaps, recounting Abram's many trials and tribulations as a child and young man. We are told of his lonely spiritual quest and eventual discovery of the One God. While we have no question about the authenticity of the Oral Tradition, why does the Torah itself not share these details with us? Of course, such a question could be posed about any section of Midrash, but, in this instance the complete lack of explanation of Abram's special status in the Torah leaves us especially puzzled. After all, Abram was selected for a truly monumental encounter with God an encounter which would give humanity monotheism and change the world forever. Why is the reason for something so important related exclusively through the Oral Tradition?

88. Resultados Por Letras
Translate this page ORDENAR. OASIS (4 VOL.), VARIOS, $, 53.00. OBRA ENCICLOPEDICA, YESODE HATEBUNAH,bar hiyya, R. abraham, $, 11.60. OBRA Y VIDA DE MEIR BAAL HANES, SUETS, MEIR, $,20.95.
http://www.libreriamaimonides.com/resultados.asp?letra=o

89. Www.ku.edu/ftp/pub/history/Europe/Medieval/bibliographies/imms-3.i-n.txt
Lull) Mill s Vallicrosa, Jos Ma., ed., La obra enciclopdica Yesode HaTebuna u-MigdalHa-Emuna de R. abraham bar hiyya ha-bargeloni, Madrid, 1952. (+ref.
http://www.ku.edu/ftp/pub/history/Europe/Medieval/bibliographies/imms-3.i-n.txt

90. OPE-MAT - Historique
Translate this page Abel, Niels Akhiezer, Naum Anthemius of Tralles abraham bar hiyya al'Battani, AbuAllah Antiphon the Sophist abraham, Max al'Biruni, Abu Arrayhan Apollonius of
http://www.gci.ulaval.ca/PIIP/math-app/Historique/mat.htm
A
Abel
, Niels Akhiezer , Naum Anthemius of Tralles Abraham bar Hiyya al'Battani , Abu Allah Antiphon the Sophist Abraham, Max al'Biruni , Abu Arrayhan Apollonius of Perga Abu Kamil Shuja al'Haitam , Abu Ali Appell , Paul Abu'l-Wafa al'Buzjani al'Kashi , Ghiyath Arago , Francois Ackermann , Wilhelm al'Khwarizmi , Abu Arbogast , Louis Adams , John Couch Albert of Saxony Arbuthnot , John Adelard of Bath Albert , Abraham Archimedes of Syracuse Adler , August Alberti , Leone Battista Archytas of Tarentum Adrain , Robert Albertus Magnus, Saint Argand , Jean Aepinus , Franz Alcuin of York Aristaeus the Elder Agnesi , Maria Alekandrov , Pavel Aristarchus of Samos Ahmed ibn Yusuf Alexander , James Aristotle Ahmes Arnauld , Antoine Aida Yasuaki Amsler , Jacob Aronhold , Siegfried Aiken , Howard Anaxagoras of Clazomenae Artin , Emil Airy , George Anderson , Oskar Aryabhata the Elder Aitken , Alexander Angeli , Stefano degli Atwood , George Ajima , Chokuyen Anstice , Robert Richard Avicenna , Abu Ali
B
Babbage
, Charles Betti , Enrico Bossut , Charles Bachet Beurling , Arne Bouguer , Pierre Bachmann , Paul Boulliau , Ismael Bacon , Roger Bhaskara Bouquet , Jean Backus , John Bianchi , Luigi Bour , Edmond Baer , Reinhold Bieberbach , Ludwig Bourgainville , Louis Baire Billy , Jacques de Boutroux , Pierre Baker , Henry Binet , Jacques Bowditch , Nathaniel Ball , W W Rouse Biot , Jean-Baptiste Bowen , Rufus Balmer , Johann Birkhoff , George Boyle , Robert Banach , Stefan Bjerknes, Carl

91. Untitled Document
Shmuel said, During prayer, I count the clouds. Rabbi Bun bar hiyya said, I Maythe One who blessed our ancestors abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Moses and Aaron
http://www.auhillel.com/sermon/notalking.htm

Translated and with a Commentary
by Kenneth L. Cohen
Rabbi Hiyya said, "I have never concentrated on prayer all of my days. Once I tried to concentrate, but all I could think about was politics." Shmuel said, "During prayer, I count the clouds." Rabbi Bun Bar Hiyya said, "I count the stones in the wall when I should be praying." Rabbi Matnaya said, "I am grateful to my head, because it knows to bow automatically when we reach the Modim prayer."
Yerushalmi, Berachot 16a
A person is obligated to pray with proper intention and to recite all the blessings with intention, but there are very few people in this world who do so with all their hearts.
Things got a little better when I left the pulpit rabbinate for an administrative position. But having been a chatterbox since early childhood, sometimes the temptation to socialize still distracts me. I try to remind myself that kibbitzing is best left for the kiddush.
The tension between keva (fixed prayer) and kavanah (proper intention) is an age-old one. How does one prevent prayer from become a rote, and therefore unfulfilling, experience? I discovered one tactic in my quest for kavanah. Periodically, I would change prayerbooks. The different pagination, different typeface, different commentaries would keep prayer fresh. For the most part, this worked.

92. Zohar
abraham bar hiyya writes “every letter and every word in every section ofthe Torah have a deep root in wisdom and contain a mystery from among the
http://members.optushome.com.au/hoopermusic/repertoire/zohar.html
Zohar: Sephardic Concerto for Mandolin and Small Orchestra
Larry Sitsky was born in Tianjin (Tientsin), China, to Russian Jewish parents. He began learning the piano and composition at an early age. Sitsky immigrated to Australia in 1951, by which time the mystical influences of Jewish, Russian and East Asian cultures had made a strong impression on his style.
For Sitsky, the whole process of composition is a mystical one. In an article by Sitsky on his approach to composition he writes:
For Sitsky, compositional process is inextricably linked to his mystical world-view. Nearly all his compositions are inspired by some type of mystical belief.
In the preface to her interview with Sitsky, Patricia Shaw reflects upon his Romantic influences:
This is not to say that Sitsky is anti-intellectual. Rather, his emphasises the value of intellectualism accompanied by passion and emotion. The mystical beliefs expressed in the kabbalistic text, the Zohar, are characterized by passionate and emotional intellectualism.
Tishby continues with specific reference to the passages in Hebrew:
With reference to the Aramaic Tishby writes:
[When considering the Aramaic text] the indications of a later date are not so obvious, but linguistic analysis and a comparison of language of the Zohar with known Aramaic sources show that this Aramaic is an artificial language drawn from specific literary source material, and it contains a mixture of dialectical linguistic expressions that never existed side by side in the living language. It [The Zohar] contains words and idioms that originated in medieval [sic] Hebrew and they can be seen through the Aramaic veneer. The poverty of the vocabulary [attested to by Gershom G. Scholem], which contains no more than a few thousand words, and the many errors in word formation and syntax, also show that we are dealing with a late artificial language.

93. Welcome To RealOlam.com ! - Jewish Community ISP, Exclusive News And Content
This movement occurred after the original works by abraham bar Hiyyaand abraham ibn Ezra became available to a wide readership.
http://www.realolam.com/channels/default.asp?channel=45&articleid=3740

94. History Of Astronomy: What's New At This Site On March 25, 1999
Abney, Sir William de Wiveleslie (18431920) Short biography and references. abrahambar hiyya Ha-Nasi abraham Ben Chaja Chija; abraham Judaeus (c. 1070-1136
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/new/new990325.html
History of Astronomy What's new
History of Astronomy:
What's new at this site on March 25, 1999
Some URLs have been updated.
Welcome / About
History of astronomy

95. Limmud - S39.html
abraham Bound and Unbound The Akeda (3 of 4). The Talmudic Story of R. HiyyaBar Ashi, who withdrew from contact with his Wife (Kidushin 81b) (4 of 4).
http://cgi.www.limmud.org/cgi-bin/mylimmud3.cgi/s39.html
ShowHebrewDate(Today); Limmud
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Settlements as Suburbs or Colonies? - Transforming the Political Geography of the West Bank (4 of 4)
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Tracks: Israel Social Issues
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The West Bank settlement process is one of the most
contentious issues in contemporary Israel. For the Palestinians and left-wing Israelis, these settlements are political colonies. For the settlers and the right-wing, they are the guarantee to a strong Israel. But just how have the settlements been established and planned? Where are they located and what is their economic basis? And if there is a peace agreement, could they really be evacuated? Click here to go to the forum for this session - Include in MyLimmud ( Click here for help
Abraham Bound and Unbound: The Akeda (3 of 4)
Avivah Zornberg
Location: E3 Tracks: Philosophy Torah Lishma Type: Textual A psychoanalytic exploration of the Akeda narrative. We will look at a set of midrashic sources that suggest a new interpretation of this classic narrative. Literary, philosophical, and Chassidic sources will also be mobilised in this reading.

96. Prof. Sara Klein-Braslavy
6. 'The Creation of Man and the Story of the Garden of Eden in the Thought of AbrahamBar hiyya', Professor Israel Efros Poet and Philosopher, I. Orpaz, N
http://www.tau.ac.il/humanities/jewishphilosophy/segel/sklein-eng.html
Prof. Sara Klein-Braslavy Hebrew Version
e-mail: sarakb@post.tau.ac.il
Education: B.A. - The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Philosophy and Hebrew Literature).
M.A. - Tel-Aviv University (Philosophy).
Ph.D. (Doctorat de 3e cycle) - Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Sorbonne, Paris (Jewish Medieval Philosophy).
Academic Interests: History of Medieval philosophy; Philosophical interpretations of the Bible in the Middle Ages; Maimonide' thought; Gersonides' thought; Gersonides' methods of inquiry; Philosophical commentaries on Averroes.
Current Research: Introductions to philosophical works and to philosophical exegesis of the Bible; Gersonides' supercommentaries on Averroes' commentaries on Aristotle; The diaporetic method in Gersonides' works (especially in the Wars of the Lord
Courses Taught: Introduction to Jewish Medieval Philosophy; Readings in Sa'adia's Beliefs and Opinions ; Readings in Judah ha-Levi's Book of Kuzari
Maimonides: Readings in Maimonides' The Guide of the Perplexed (Introduction, Theory of Attibutes); Maimonides' Theory of Providence and his Interpretation of the book of Job; Maimonides' Interpretation of the Story of Creation; Maimonides' interpretation of the Adam Stories in Genesis; Maimonides on the Creation of the World.
Gersonides: Gersonides' Theory of the Intellect; Gersonides' Theory of Knowledge and the Immortality of the Intellect; Foreknowledge and Prophecy in Gersonides' Thought; Gersonides and his Predecessors on God's Knowledge of the Particulars; Gersonides' Theory of Providence and his Interpretation of the Book of Job; Gersonides on the Creation of the World; Gersonides' Theory of Miracles.

97. More Quotations On Geometry
from the art of demonstration. Book on the Finding of Chords. Abrahambar hiyya (1070 to 1136). Who wishes correctly to learn the
http://www.gap-system.org/~john/geometry/Lectures/Q2.html
Course MT3818 Topics in Geometry Previous page
(Geometry quotes) Contents Next page
(Contents)
More quotations on Geometry
Plato (427 BC to 437 BC)
The ludicrous state of solid geometry made me pass over this branch. Republic , VII, 528. The knowledge of which geometry aims is the knowledge of the eternal.
Republic , VII, 52. Archimedes of Syracuse (287 BC to 212 BC) Archimedes to Eratosthenes greeting. ... certain things first became clear to me by a mechanical method, although they had to be demonstrated by geometry afterwards because their investigation by the said method did not furnish an actual demonstration. But it is of course easier, when we have previously acquired by the method, some knowledge of the questions, to supply the proof than it is to find it without any previous knowledge.
The Method Nichomachus of Gerasa (about 100 AD) ... arithmetic ... which is the mother of geometry ...
Introduction to Arithmetic Proclus Diadochus (411 to 485) According to most accounts, geometry was first discovered among the Egyptians, taking its origin from the measurement of areas. For they found it necessary by reason of the flooding of the Nile, which wiped out everybody's proper boundaries. Nor is there anything surprising in that the discovery both of this and of the other sciences should have had its origin in a practical need, since everything which is in process of becoming progresses from the imperfect to the perfect.
On Euclid The Pythagoreans considered all mathematical science to be divided into four parts: one half they marked off as concerned with quantity, the other half with magnitude; and each of these they posited as twofold. A quantity can be considered in regard to its character by itself or in relation to another quantity, magnitudes as either stationary or in motion. Arithmetic, then, studies quantity as such, music the relations between quantities, geometry magnitude at rest, spherics magnitude inherently moving.

98. LOS JUDÍOS 
LOS JUDÍOS DEL OCCIDENTE MUSULMÁN ALÁNDALUS Y SEFARAD Ocho siglos de civilización en España y Portugal (711-1492)
http://www.organizacionislam.org.ar/losjudios.htm
LOS JUDÍOS DEL OCCIDENTE MUSULMÁN AL-ÁNDALUS Y SEFARAD Ocho siglos de civilización en España y Portugal (711-1492) El Doctor en Filosofía y Filología Semítica de la Universidad de Zaragoza, especializado en el pensamiento musulmán andalusí, Joaquín Lomba Fuentes, dice en su reciente libro La raíz semítica de lo europeo (Ediciones Akal, Madrid, 1997): Ante todo, Europa pudo leer por primera vez la ciencia y filosofía griega no sólo tal como en su día fue sino reinterpretada, elaborada y perfeccionada por musulmanes y judíos. (...) Con ello y, como consecuencia, aparece emparejado el tema,de procedencia semita, árabe y judía, cual es el de las relaciones entre fe y filosofía, o razón, entre religión y fe, entre pensamiento humano y revelación. Para Averroes y Maimónides, la filosofía y la religión no se pueden contradecir a pesar de que son autónomas, porque apuntan y llevan a la misma Verdad» La Sefarad bíblica Pese a su poética resonancia oriental, la palabra hebrea «Sefarad» no se refiere a Asia: designa a la Península Ibérica, y «sefaradí» quiere decir judío oriundo de España o Portugal.

99. História Da Matemática  História Dos Problemas

http://www.malhatlantica.pt/mathis/
História da Matemática
história dos problemas CULTURAS
Egípto

Babilónia

China

Grécia
...
Índia

Árabes
Europa Medieval

Europa Renascentista
BIOGRAFIAS Abraham bar Hiyya Abraham ben Erza Alcuino de York Aryabhata I ... Paolo Dagomari REGRAS E ALGORITMOS Regra da falsa posição PROBLEMAS Caminhando para St. Ives Carteiros Dividindo o vinho Maria e as maçãs ... Últimas actualizações Desde os tempos mais remotos os textos de matemática incluem problemas para os leitores resolverem. Os textos mais antigos como os Egípcios , os Babilónios e os Chineses eram compostos por uma lista de problemas cujas soluções eram depois fornecidas. Por exemplo, o mais antigo destes textos, de origem egípcia, conhecido por Papiro de Rhind contém uma colecção de 85 problemas. Os problemas eram escolhidos como uma forma de ensinar, ao leitor, a matemática, sendo muitas vezes colocados por grau de dificuldades; por outro lado estes problemas reflectem, muitas vezes, as necessidades das sociedades, os diferentes aspectos da vida quotidiana, etc. Livros com problemas matemáticos apareceram em todas as civilizações, ao longo da história até aos nossos dias. Espantosamente, o mesmo problema aparece em textos de civilizações diferentes e em diferentes períodos da história.

100. Traditio Classicorum

http://www.theol.uni-freiburg.de/forsch/lohr/lohr-ch1.htm
Traditio Classicorum Teil 1: A-L
Charles Lohr
Index A-L:
A
AL-ABHARI ABRAHAM IBN EZRA ABRAHAM SAVASORDA (ABRAHAM BAR HIYYA) ABULCASIM ... AZARCHEL
B BABRIUS BACCHYLIDES BARLAAM ET JOSAPHAT BARNABAS ... BRYSON
C CAESAR, C. JULIUS CALLIMACHUS CALPURNIUS CARMINA PRIAPEA ... CYRILLUS ALEXANDRINUS
D DANTE ALIGHIERI DAPHNIS ET CHLOE DARES PHRYGIUS (De excidio Troiae historia) DE DICTIS PHILOSOPHORUM ANTIQUORUM ... DURANDUS
E EGERIAE PEREGRINATIO EMPEDOCLES ENNIUS ENNODIUS ... EXPOSITIO TOTIUS MUNDI ET GENTIUM
F FABIUS PICTOR FEBRONIAE PASSIO FELIX, Vita Sancti Guthlaci FESTUS AVIENUS ... FULGENTIUS
G GALENUS GALFREDUS DE VINOSALVO GEBER (JABIR IBN AFLAH) GERMANICUS ... GUALTERUS MAP
H HARPOCRATIANUS HEKATAEUS HELIODORUS HEPHAESTIO ALEXANDRINUS (De metris) ... HYPSICLES
I IAMBLICHUS IBYCUS IGNATIUS ANTIOCHENUS IRENAEUS ... ISOCRATES
J JACOBUS DE VORAGINE JOACHIM FLORENSIS JOHANNES CASSIANUS JOHANNES CHRYSOSTOMUS ... JUVENALIS, D. JUNIUS L LACTANTIUS LEGENDA AUREA LEONTINUS LEUCIPPUS ... Title Page - English Version
AL-ABHARI
  • Thomas Novariensis, Isagoge id est Breve introductorium arabum in scientiam logicae cum versione latina (Rome 1625).
    ABRAHAM IBN EZRA
  • R. Levy, The Astrological Works of Abraham ibn Ezra (Baltimore 1927).
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