Japanese Mathematics
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denotes a distinct kind of mathematics which was developed in
Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
during the
Edo period The , also known as the , is the period between 1600 or 1603 and 1868 in the history of Japan, when the country was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and some 300 regional ''daimyo'', or feudal lords. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengok ...
(1603–1867). The term ''wasan'', from ''wa'' ("Japanese") and ''san'' ("calculation"), was coined in the 1870s and employed to distinguish native Japanese mathematical theory from Western mathematics (洋算 ''yōsan''). In the
history of mathematics The history of mathematics deals with the origin of discoveries in mathematics and the History of mathematical notation, mathematical methods and notation of the past. Before the modern age and the worldwide spread of knowledge, written examples ...
, the development of ''wasan'' falls outside the Western realm. At the beginning of the
Meiji period The was an era of Japanese history that extended from October 23, 1868, to July 30, 1912. The Meiji era was the first half of the Empire of Japan, when the Japanese people moved from being an isolated feudal society at risk of colonizatio ...
(1868–1912), Japan and its people opened themselves to the West. Japanese scholars adopted Western mathematical technique, and this led to a decline of interest in the ideas used in ''wasan''.


History


Pre-Edo period (552-1600)

Records of mathematics in the early periods of Japanese history are nearly nonexistent. Though it was at this time that a large influx of knowledge from China reached Japan, including that of reading and writing, little sources exist of usage of mathematics within Japan. However, it is suggested that this period saw the use of an exponential numbering system following the law of a^*a^ = a^.


Edo period

The Japanese mathematical
schema Schema may refer to: Science and technology * SCHEMA (bioinformatics), an algorithm used in protein engineering * Schema (genetic algorithms), a set of programs or bit strings that have some genotypic similarity * Schema.org, a web markup vocab ...
evolved during a period when Japan's people were isolated from European influences, but instead borrowed from ancient mathematical texts written in China, including those from the
Yuan dynasty The Yuan dynasty ( ; zh, c=元朝, p=Yuáncháo), officially the Great Yuan (; Mongolian language, Mongolian: , , literally 'Great Yuan State'), was a Mongol-led imperial dynasty of China and a successor state to the Mongol Empire after Div ...
and earlier. The Japanese mathematicians Yoshida Shichibei Kōyū, Imamura Chishō, and Takahara Kisshu are among the earliest known Japanese mathematicians. They came to be known to their contemporaries as "the Three Arithmeticians".Smith, Yoshida was the author of the oldest extant Japanese mathematical text, the 1627 work called '' Jinkōki''. The work dealt with the subject of
soroban The is an abacus developed in Japan. It is derived from the History of Science and Technology in China, ancient Chinese suanpan, imported to Japan in the 14th century. Like the suanpan, the soroban is still used today, despite the proliferation ...
arithmetic Arithmetic is an elementary branch of mathematics that deals with numerical operations like addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. In a wider sense, it also includes exponentiation, extraction of roots, and taking logarithms. ...
, including square and cube root operations. Yoshida's book significantly inspired a new generation of mathematicians, and redefined the Japanese perception of educational enlightenment, which was defined in the Seventeen Article Constitution as "the product of earnest meditation". Seki Takakazu founded ''enri'' (円理: circle principles), a mathematical system with the same purpose as
calculus Calculus is the mathematics, mathematical study of continuous change, in the same way that geometry is the study of shape, and algebra is the study of generalizations of arithmetic operations. Originally called infinitesimal calculus or "the ...
at a similar time to calculus's development in Europe. However Seki's investigations did not proceed from the same foundations as those used in Newton's studies in Europe. Mathematicians like Takebe Katahiro played an important role in developing Enri (" circle principle"), an analog to the Western calculus. Mathematical Society of Japan
/ref> He obtained power series expansion of (\arcsin(x))^2 in 1722, 15 years earlier than Euler. He used Richardson extrapolation in 1695, about 200 years earlier than Richardson. He also computed 41 digits of π, based on polygon approximation and Richardson extrapolation.


Select mathematicians

The following list encompasses mathematicians whose work was derived from ''wasan.'' * Yoshida Mitsuyoshi (1598–1672) * Seki Takakazu (1642–1708) * Takebe Kenkō (1664–1739) * Matsunaga Ryohitsu (
fl. ''Floruit'' ( ; usually abbreviated fl. or occasionally flor.; from Latin for 'flourished') denotes a date or period during which a person was known to have been alive or active. In English, the unabbreviated word may also be used as a noun indic ...
1718-1749) * Kurushima Kinai (d. 1757) * Arima Raido (1714–1783) List of Japanese mathematicians
-- Clark University,