|
- Archives -
'Mathematics of the Past, by
Garry Kasparov'
Introduction
“Histories make men wise;
poets, witty; the mathematics, subtle; natural philosophy, deep; moral,
grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend.”
[Francis Bacon – Essays (1625) ‘Of
Studies’]
What do history, mathematics and chess have in
common?
They have in common: facts, possibilities and
probabilities.
The history record stores chronological data. We
remember it and pass on to the new generation;
Mathematics is the study of these facts, and
figures, which then may be used for verification and correctness;
Chess play is, in a sort of way, acting out
‘history’ and so rendering present the past.
However, the best mathematical equation I have ever
seen is:
1 cross + 3 nails = 4 given.
*******************
Mathematics of the Past, by Garry
Kasparov
Since my early childhood, I have been inspired and excited by ancient
and medieval history. I also have a good memory, which allows me to
remember historical events, dates, names, and related details. So, after
reading many history books, I analysed and compared the information and,
little by little, I began to feel that there was something wrong with
the dates of antiquity. There were too many discrepancies and
contradictions that could not be explained within the framework of
traditional chronology. For example, let's examine what we know of
ancient Rome.
The monumental work The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, written by
English historian and scholar Edward Gibbon (1737-1794), is a great
source of detailed information on the history of the Roman Empire.
Before commenting on this book, let me remark that I cannot imagine how
- with their vast territories - the Romans did not use geographical
maps, how they conducted trade without a banking system, and how the
Roman army, on which the Empire rested, was unable to improve its
weapons and military tactics during nine centuries of wars.
With the use of simple mathematics, it is possible to discover in
ancient history several such dramatic contradictions, which historians
don't seem to consider. Let us analyse some numbers. E. Gibbon gives a
very precise description of a Roman legion, which " ... was divided into
10 cohorts ... The first cohort, ... was formed of 1 105 soldiers ...
The remaining 9 cohorts
consisted each of 555 soldiers, ... The whole body of legionary infantry
amounted to 6 100 men." He also writes, "The cavalry, without which the
force of the legion would have remained imperfect, was divided into 10
troops or squadrons; the first, as the companion of the first cohort,
consisted of a 132 men; while each of the other 9 amounted only to 66.
The entire establishment
formed a regiment ... of 726 horses, naturally connected with its
respected legion ..." Finally, he gives an exact estimate of a Roman
legion: "We may compute, however, that the legion, which was itself a
body of 6 831 Romans, might, with its attendant auxiliaries, amount to
about 12 500 men. The peace establishment of Hadrian and his successors
was composed of no less than 30 of these formidable brigades; and most
probably formed a standing force of 375 000." This enormous military
force of 375000 men, maintained during a time of peace, was larger than
the Napoleonic army in the 1800s.
After 1800, Napoleon routinely manoeuvred armies of 250 000. See
Encyclopedia Britannica online at
http://www.britannica.com/
Let me point out that according to the Encyclopedia Britannica,6
"Battles on the Continent in the mid-18th century typically involved
armies of about 60 000 to 70 000 troops." Of course, an army needed
weapons, equipment, supplies, etc.
Again, E. Gibbon gives us a lot of
details: "Besides their arms, which the legionaries scarcely considered
as an encumbrance, they were laden with their kitchen furniture, the
instruments of fortifications, and the provisions of many days. Under
this weight, which would oppress the delicacy of a modern soldier, they
were trained by a regular step to advance, in about six hours, nearly
twenty miles. On the appearance of an enemy, they threw aside their
baggage, and by easy and rapid evolutions converted the column of march
into an order of battle." This description of the physical fitness of an
average Roman soldier is extraordinary. It brings us to the very strange
conclusion that, at some point, the human race retrogressed in its
ability to cope with physical problems. Is it possible that there was a
gradual decline of the human race, with hundreds of thousands of
Schwarzenegger-like athletes of Roman times evolving into medieval
knights with relatively weak bodies (like today's teenage boys), whose
little suits of armour are today proudly displayed in museums? Is there
a reasonable biological or genetic explanation to this dramatic change
affecting the human race over such a short period of time?
In order to supply such an army with weapons, a whole industry would
have been needed. In his work, E. Gibbon explicitly mentions iron (or
even steel) weapons:
"Besides a lighter spear, the legionary soldier grasped in his right
hand the formidable pilum ..., whose utmost length was about six feet,
and which was terminated by a massy triangular point of steel of
eighteen inches." In another place, he indicates "The use of lances and
of iron maces ..." It is believed that the extraction of iron from ores
was very common in the Roman Empire.
However, to smelt pure iron, a temperature of 1 539oC is required, which
couldn't be achieved by burning wood or coal without the blowing or the
blast furnaces invented more than a 1 000 years later. Even in the 15th
century, the iron produced was of quite poor quality because large
amounts of carbon had to be absorbed to lower the melting temperature to
1 150oC. There is also the
question of sufficient resources - the blast furnaces used in the mid-16th
century required large amounts of wood to produce charcoal, an expensive
and unclean process that led to the eventual deforestation of Europe.
How could ancient Rome have sustained a production of quality iron on
the scale necessary to supply thousands of tonnes of arms and equipment
to its vast army?
Just by estimating the size of the army, we can conclude that the
population of the Eastern and Western Roman Empire in the second century
AD was at least 20 million people, but it could have been as high as 40
or even 50 million.
According to E.Gibbon, "Ancient Italy
... contained eleven hundred and ninety seven cities." The city of Rome
had more than a half-million inhabitants, and there were other great
cities in the Empire. All of these cities were connected by a network of
paved public highways, their combined lengths more than 4 000 miles!
This could only be possible in a technologically advanced society.
According to J.C. Russell, in the 4th century, the population of Western
Roman Empire was 22 million (including 750 000 people in England and
five million in France), while the population of the Eastern Roman
Empire was 34 million.
It is not hard to determine that there is a serious problem with these
numbers. In England, a population of four million in the 15th century
grew to 62 million in the 20th century. Similarly, in France, a
population of about 20 million in the 17th century (during the reign of
Louis XIV), grew to 60 million in the 20th century ... and
this growth occurred despite losses due to several atrocious wars. We
know from historical records that during the Napoleonic wars alone,
about three million people perished, most of them young men. But there
was also the French Revolution, the wars of the 18th century in which
France suffered heavy losses, and the slaughter of World War I. By
assuming a constant population growth rate, it is easy to estimate that
the population of England doubled every 120 years, while the population
of France doubled every 190 years.
Graphs showing the hypothetical growth of these two functions are
provided in Figure 1. According to this model, in the 4th and 5th
centuries, at the breakdown of the Roman Empire, the (hypothetical)
population of England would have been 10 000 to 15 000, while the
population of France would have been 170 000 to 250 000. However,
according to estimates based on historical documents, these numbers
should be in the millions.
It seems that starting with the 5th century, there were periods during
which the population of Europe stagnated or decreased. Attempts at
logical explanations, such as poor hygiene, epidemics, and short
lifespan, can hardly withstand criticism. In fact, from the 5th century
until the 18th century, there was no significant improvement in sanitary
conditions in Western Europe, there were many epidemics, and hygiene was
poor. Also, the introduction of .rearms in the 15th century resulted in
more war casualties. According to UNESCO demographic resources, an
increase of 0.2 per cent per annum is required to assure the sustainable
growth of a human population, while an increase of 0.02 per cent per
annum is described as a demographical disaster. There is no evidence
that such a disaster has ever happened to the human race. Therefore,
there is no reason to assume that the growth rate in ancient times
differed significantly from the growth rate in later epochs.
These discrepancies lead me to suspect that there is a gap between the
historical dates attributed to the Roman Empire and those suggested by
the above computations. But there are more inconsistencies in the
historical record of humankind. As I have already noted, there are
similar gaps of several centuries in technological and scientific
development. Notice that knowledge and technology traditionally
associated with the ancient world presumably disappears during the Dark
Ages, only to resurface in the 15th century during the early
Renaissance. The history of mathematics provides one such example. By
chronologically and logically ordering major mathematical achievements,
beginning with arithmetic and Greek geometry and finishing with the
invention of calculus by I. Newton (1643-1727) and G.W. Leibnitz
(1646-1716), we see a thousand-year gap separating antiquity from the
new era. Is this only a coincidence? But what about astronomy, chemistry
(alchemy), medicine, biology, and physics? There are too many
inconsistencies and unexplained riddles in ancient history. Today, we
are unable to build simple objects made in ancient times in the way they
were originally created -this in a time when technology has produced the
space shuttle and science is on the brink of cloning the human body! It
is preposterous to blame all of the lost secrets of the past on the .re
that destroyed the Library of Alexandria, as some have suggested.
It is unfortunate that each time a paradox of history unfolds, we are
left without satisfactory answers and are persuaded to believe that we
have lost the ancient knowledge. Instead of disregarding the facts that
disagree with the traditional interpretation, we should accept them and
put the theory under rigorous scientific scrutiny. Explanations of these
paradoxes and contradictions
should not be left only to historians. These are scientific and
multidisciplinary problems and, in my opinion, history - as a single
natural science - is unable to solve them alone.
I think that the chronology of technological and scientific development
should be carefully investigated. The too numerous claims of
technological wonders in antiquity turn history into science friction
(e.g., the production of monolithic stone blocks in Egypt, the precise
astronomical calculations obtained without
mechanical clocks, the glass objects and mirrors made 5 000 years ago,
and so on). It is unfortunate that historians reject scientific
incursion into their domain. For instance, the most reasonable
explanation of Egyptian pyramid-building technology, presented by French
chemist Joseph Davidovits (the creator of the geopolymer technology),
was rejected by Egyptologists, who refused to provide him with samples
of pyramid material.
About five years ago, I came across several books written by two
mathematicians from Moscow State University: academician A.T. Fomenko
and G.V. Nosovskij. The books described the work of a group of
professional mathematicians, led by Fomenko, who had considered the
issues of ancient and medieval chronology for more than 20 years with
fascinating results. Using modern mathematical and statistical methods,
as well as precise astronomical computations, they discovered that
ancient history was artificially extended by more than 1 000 years. For
reasons beyond my understanding, historians are still ignoring their
work.
But let us return to mathematics and to ancient Rome. The Roman numeral
system discouraged serious calculations. How could the ancient Romans
build elaborate structures such as temples, bridges, and aqueducts
without precise and elaborate calculations? The most important
deficiency of Roman numerals is that they are completely unsuitable even
for performing a simple operation like addition, not to mention
multiplication, which presents substantial difficulties (see Figure 2).
In early European universities, algorithms for multiplication and
division using Roman numerals were doctoral research topics. It is
absolutely impossible to use clumsy Roman numbers in multi-stage
calculations. The Roman system had no numeral "zero." Even the simplest
decimal operations with numbers cannot be expressed in Roman numerals.
N.P. Just try to add Roman numerals:
MCDXXV + MCMLXV22 or multiply : DCLIII Ã- CXCIX23
Try to write a multiplication table in Roman numerals. What about
fractions and operations with fractions?
Despite all these deficiencies, Roman numerals supposedly remained the
predominant representation of numbers in European culture until the 14th
century. How did the ancient Romans succeed in their calculations and
complicated astronomical computations? It is believed that in the 3rd
century, the Greek mathematician Diophantus was able to find positive
and rational
solutions to the following system of equations, called Diophantic today
x31 + x2 = y3 x1 + x2 = y.
According to historians, at the time of Diophantus, only one symbol was
used for an unknown, a symbol for "plus" did not exist, neither was
there a symbol for "zero." How could Diophantic equations be solved
using Greek letters or Roman numerals (see Figure 2)? Can these
solutions be reproduced? Are we dealing here with another secret of
ancient history that we are not supposed to question? Let us point out
that even Leonardo da Vinci, at the beginning of the 16th century, had
troubles with fractional powers. It is also interesting that in all of
da Vinci's works, there is no trace of "zero" and that he was using 22/7
as the approximation of p - probably it was the best approximation of p
available at that time.
It is also interesting to look at the invention of the logarithm. The
logarithm of a number x (to the base 10) expresses simply the number of
digits in the decimal representation of x, so it is clearly connected to
the idea of the positional numbering system. Obviously, Roman numerals
could not have led to the invention of logarithms.
Knowledge of our history timeline is important, and not only for
historians. If indeed the dates of antiquity are incorrect, there could
be profound implications for our beliefs about the past, and also for
science. Historical knowledge is important to better understand our
present situation and the changes that take place around us. Important
issues such as global warming and environmental changes depend on
available historical data. Astronomical records could have a completely
different meaning if the described events took place at times other than
those provided by traditional chronology. I trust that the younger
generation will have no fear of "untouchable" historical dogma and will
use contemporary knowledge to challenge questionable theories. For sure,
it is an exciting opportunity to reverse the subordinate role science
plays to history, and to create completely new areas of scientific
research.
REFERENCES :
1 E. Gibbon. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Peter Fenelon
Collier & Son, vol. 1, New York, 1899. This book is also available
online at:
http://www.ccel.org/g/gibbon/decline/. 2 I. Davidenko and Y. Kesler.
Book of Civilization, (with preface by Garry Kasparov). EkoPress-2000,
Moscow, 2001. 3 J. Davidovits and M. Morris. The Pyramids: An Enigma
Solved. New York:
Hippocrene Books, 1988 (4th printing). Later by Dorset Press, New York,
1989, 1990. 4 A. T. Fomenko. Empirico-Statistical Analysis of Narrative
Material and its Applications to Historical Dating. Volume 1: The
Development of the Statistical Tools, and Volume 2: The Analysis of
Ancient and Medieval Records.
Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994, The Netherlands. 5 A. T. Fomenko ,
V.V. Kalashnikov and G.V. Nosovskij. Geometrical and Statistical Methods
of Analysis of Star Configurations: Dating Ptolemy's Almagest. CRC
Press, 1993, USA. 6 J. C. Russell. Late Ancient and Medieval Population.
American Philosophical Society.
152 p., (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 48 pt. 3),
Philadelphia, 1958. 7 J.E. Dayton. Minerals, Metals, Glazing and Man.
Harrap, London, 1978. ISBN: 0245528075. 8 The Notebooks of Leonardo da
Vinci, 2nd ed., 2 vol. (1955, reissued 1977); and Jean Paul Richter
(compiler and ed.). Original kept at Institut de France, Paris. 9
Leonardo da Vinci. Codex Atlanticus. Kept in Biblioteca Ambrosiana in
Milan, Italy.
Garry Kasparov has been the chess world champion since 1985, when he won
the title at the age of 22. In 1997, during a historical chess challenge
that made headlines all over the world, he defeated IBM's Deep Blue
supercomputer. There are many web sides devoted to Garry, but we
recommend :
http://www.kasparovchess.com/.
A biography can be found at
http://www.chennaiweb.com/sp/chess/bio/garyk/.
We invite all comments and other points of view. Correspondence can be
sent directly to p in the Sky by email at
info@new-tradition.org
info@new-tradition.org, or
by snail mail. All letters will be forwarded to Garry Kasparov.
*****************************************************************
|