Jami has produced a work of scholarly haute couture that is probably an almost definitive account of this first phase of the circulation of Western learning in China ... Jami has done an exemplary job in making the book optimally accessible to a wide readership, and the amount of mathematical background needed to appreciate the arguments is kept to a minimum.

Peter Engelfriet, Journal of Asian Studies

Jami's work ... is a fascinating study of how, in late seventeenth century China, a decision by the Emperor helped to return mathematics to an important place in Chinese society.

Canadian Society for History and Philosophy of Mathematics

The Emperor's New Mathematics provides an incredible contribution to the studies of Qing history and history of sciences in late imperial China.

Mathematical Association of America

In 1644 the Qing dynasty seized power in China. Its Manchu elite were at first seen by most of their subjects as foreigners from beyond the Great Wall, and the consolidation of Qing rule presented significant cultural and political problems, as well as military challenges. It was the Kangxi emperor (r. 1662-1722) who set the dynasty on a firm footing, and one of his main stratagems to achieve this was the appropriation for imperial purposes of the scientific knowledge brought to China by the Jesuit mission (1582-1773). For almost two centuries, the Jesuits put the sciences in the service of evangelization, teaching and practising what came to be known as 'Western learning' among Chinese scholars, many of whom took an active interest in it. After coming to the throne as a teenager, Kangxi began his life-long intervention in mathematical and scientific matters when he forced a return to the use of Western methods in official astronomy. In middle life, he studied astronomy, musical theory and mathematics, with Jesuits as his teachers. In his last years he sponsored a great compilation covering these three disciplines, and set several of his sons to work on this project. All of this activity formed a vital part of his plan to establish Manchu authority over the Chinese. This book explains why Kangxi made the sciences a tool for laying the foundations of empire, and to show how, as part of this process, mathematics was reconstructed as a branch of imperial learning.
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Jami explores how the emperor Kangxi solidified the Qing dynasty in seventeenth-century China through the appropriation of the 'Western learning', and especially the mathematics, of Jesuit missionaries. This book details not only the history of mathematical ideas, but also their political and cultural impact.
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FOREWORD; INTRODUCTION; PART I WESTERN LEARNING AND THE MING-QING TRANSITION; PART II THE TWO FIRST DECADES OF KANGXI'S RULE; PART III MATHEMATICS FOR THE EMPEROR; PART IV TURNING TO CHINESE SCHOLARS AND BANNERMEN; PART V MATHEMATICS AND THE EMPIRE; CONCLUSION; UNITS; BIBLIOGRAPHY
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A new insight into the role played by the mathematical sciences in establishing the rule of China's last and greatest dynasty Tells the story of the Kangxi emperor as the only ruler of a great empire who personally acquired advanced expertise in mathematics and astronomy A study of how sciences and empires have shaped each other in the early modern age, focused on an empire centred in East Asia rather than in Western Europe An analysis of the reception of Western mathematics in China prior to the nineteenth century that gives full weight to sources in Chinese and Manchu, as well as in European languages A historical analysis of mathematics that ties together its technical aspects with its political and cultural implications
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Catherine Jami is a Director of Research at the French CNRS (SPHERE, Université de Paris-Diderot). She originally trained as a mathematician, and then in Chinese studies. In the past she has served as presidents for both the International Society for the History of East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine and the Association Française d'Etudes Chinoises. She was also treasurer for the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science (ICSU). Starting with her book 'Les Méthodes Rapides pour la Trigonométrie et le Rapport Précis du Cercle (1774): tradition chinoise et apport occidental en mathématiques' (1990), she has published extensively on mathematics in seventeenth and eighteenth century China, as well as on the Jesuit missionaries and the reception of the sciences they introduced to late Ming and early Qing China.
Les mer
A new insight into the role played by the mathematical sciences in establishing the rule of China's last and greatest dynasty Tells the story of the Kangxi emperor as the only ruler of a great empire who personally acquired advanced expertise in mathematics and astronomy A study of how sciences and empires have shaped each other in the early modern age, focused on an empire centred in East Asia rather than in Western Europe An analysis of the reception of Western mathematics in China prior to the nineteenth century that gives full weight to sources in Chinese and Manchu, as well as in European languages A historical analysis of mathematics that ties together its technical aspects with its political and cultural implications
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199601400
Publisert
2011
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
1168 gr
Høyde
253 mm
Bredde
197 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
454

Forfatter

Biographical note

Catherine Jami is a Director of Research at the French CNRS (SPHERE, Université de Paris-Diderot). She originally trained as a mathematician, and then in Chinese studies. In the past she has served as presidents for both the International Society for the History of East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine and the Association Française d'Etudes Chinoises. She was also treasurer for the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science (ICSU). Starting with her book 'Les Méthodes Rapides pour la Trigonométrie et le Rapport Précis du Cercle (1774): tradition chinoise et apport occidental en mathématiques' (1990), she has published extensively on mathematics in seventeenth and eighteenth century China, as well as on the Jesuit missionaries and the reception of the sciences they introduced to late Ming and early Qing China.