A Cognitive Typology for Numerical Notation
Cambridge Archaeological Journal • Vol/Iss. 14(1) • McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research • Cambridge UK • Published In • Pages: 37-52 •
By Chrisomalis, Stephen
Abstract
Note
This paper considers a cross-cultural sample of numerical systems and, while it does not test hypotheses per se, it does provide a number of explanatory observations based on the data from the sample. These observations are listed below.
Sample Used | Coded Data | Comment |
---|---|---|
Unique sample of 17 numerical notation systems | researcher's own |
Hypothesis | Supported |
---|---|
"Additive systems do not develop from positional ancestors" (p. 46) | Support claimed |
"Cumulative systems do not develop from non-cumulative ancestors" (p. 46) | Support claimed |
Over time there is an increase in non-cumulative over cumulative systems and of positional over non-positional systems (p. 47) | Support claimed |
"Positional systems are not replaced by additive systems" (p. 47) | Support claimed |
"Non-cumulative systems are not replaced by cumulative systems" (p. 48) | Support claimed |
Documents and Hypotheses Filed By: dmccloskey103 anj.droe