<p>“On a very general historiographic level, it is a tributary of the idea that unifying narratives … . On a very specific level, it is the consequence of the specialties of each contributor taking part in the collective and collaborative research initiative that was the SAW Project. It is an up-to-date window on what currently advances the historiography of ancient mathematics and, therefore, a work that I recommend without any shadow of doubt.” (Carlos Gonçalves, Aestimatio, Vol. 4, 2023)</p> <p>“Mathematics, Administrative and Economic Activities in Ancient Worlds fills a longstanding need to situate mathematics into its context of administration in which it originated and developed in various societies. … These publications attest to the lively and active community of historians of science working on ancient sources and the potential to learn about the origin and early development of sciences … within societies which–judging by recent developments–has become a point of concern in many parts of the world.” (Annette Imhausen, NTM, Vol. 30 (3), September, 2022)</p> <p>“As an economist, I thoroughly enjoyed and was impressed at the many details and analysis of those examples of these activities in the varied places during these early time periods. … The is book is very comprehensive in its discussion. Math formulas explaining different ways of computing interest and many other types of financial economic analysis are given. Each chapter has an ample number of references.” (Paul Gentle, HEI History of Economic Ideas, Vol. 29 (2), 2021)</p>
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Cécile Michel is a Senior Researcher at the laboratory ArScAn, at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), (CNRS, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Université Paris Nanterre, Ministère de la Culture) and a Professor at Hamburg University. An Assyriologist, she works on Assyrian and Babylonian cuneiform texts from the 2nd millenium BC and conducts research on social and economic history, gender studies, material culture, education, mathematics and literacy. She is a member of the international team in charge of the decipherment of the private archives of Assyrian merchants excavated in central Anatolia. Her publications include Correspondance des marchands de Kaniš au début du IIe millénaire av. J.-C. (Le Cerf, 2001), Women in Aššur and Kaneš from the private archives of Assyrian merchants of the early 2nd millennium BC (SBL, in press), Richesse et sociétés (ed. with C. Baroin, De Boccard 2013), Wool Economy in the Ancient Near East and the Aegean: from the Beginnings of Sheep Husbandry to Institutional Textile Industry (ed. with C. Breniquet, Oxbow Books 2014), and The Role of Women in Work and Society in the Ancient Near East (ed. with B. Lion, Walter de Gruyter 2016).Karine Chemla is a Senior Researcher at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), laboratory SPHERE (CNRS & Université de Paris. Her research focuses the historical anthropological aspects of the relationship between mathematics and the various cultures in the context of which it is practiced. Chemla published Les Neuf Chapitres (with Guo Shuchun, Dunod, 2004), and edited The History of Mathematical Proof in Ancient Traditions (Cambridge University Press, 2012); Texts, Textual Acts and the History of Science (with J. Virbel, Springer, 2015); The Oxford Handbook of Generality in Mathematics and the Sciences (with R. Chorlay and D. Rabouin, Oxford University Press, 2016); Numerical Tables and Tabular Layouts in Chinese ScholarlyDocuments (Special issues of East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine, 43 (2016, March 2017) & 44 (2016, April 2017)); and Cultures without culturalism: The making of scientific knowledge (with Evelyn Fox Keller, Duke University Press, 2017). Chemla is a member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina (2005), of the Academia Europaea (2013), and of the American Philosophical Society (2019).