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    Σ(i³) = (Σi)² (svengeier@mathstodon.xyz)'s status on Monday, 02-Dec-2024 06:10:54 JSTΣ(i³) = (Σi)²Σ(i³) = (Σi)²
    in reply to
    • simsa03
    • John Carlos Baez

    @simsa03 @johncarlosbaez
    The earliest notion of a "instantaneous motion" known to me would be in Bhāskara the 2ⁿᵈs works on planetary motion, around ~1200 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bh%C4%81skara_II#Calculus

    In conversationabout 5 months ago from mathstodon.xyzpermalink

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      Bhāskara II
      Bhāskara II ([bʰɑːskərə]; c.1114–1185), also known as Bhāskarāchārya (lit. 'Bhāskara the teacher'), was an Indian polymath, mathematician, astronomer and engineer. From verses in his main work, Siddhāṁta Śiromaṇī, it can be inferred that he was born in 1114 in Vijjadavida (Vijjalavida) and living in the Satpura mountain ranges of Western Ghats, believed to be the town of Patana in Chalisgaon, located in present-day Khandesh region of Maharashtra by scholars. In a temple in Maharashtra, an inscription supposedly created by his grandson Changadeva, lists Bhaskaracharya's ancestral lineage for several generations before him as well as two generations after him. Henry Colebrooke who was the first European to translate (1817) Bhaskaracharya II's mathematical classics refers to the family as Maharashtrian Brahmins residing on the banks of the Godavari. Born in a Hindu Deshastha Brahmin family of scholars, mathematicians and astronomers, Bhaskara II was...
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