5.Babylonian numbers 1-9

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Komentáře • 187

  • @vinkosusac1130
    @vinkosusac1130 Před 4 lety +35

    After this I started to like our current number symbols :)

  • @PrestonsDogFood
    @PrestonsDogFood Před 6 lety +98

    See Chinese, we have 1234 as 一二三四. Funny to think that we humans may have been programmed a fixed limit of RAM, we can only process three lines without counting LOL~

    • @ollie-d
      @ollie-d Před 6 lety +8

      Nice observation. I'd recommend reading some of Rafael Nunez's (UCSD) research, specifically into numerosity if you're interested in stuff like that.

    • @PrestonsDogFood
      @PrestonsDogFood Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks! I'll Search for it

    • @alphalunamare
      @alphalunamare Před 5 lety +6

      Actually Humans can recognise 5 at the most not 3 but then it has been a long time.

    • @JanoTuotanto
      @JanoTuotanto Před 3 lety +6

      I, II, III, IV, V

    • @user-ym4pi7gx3i
      @user-ym4pi7gx3i Před 3 lety +1

      This is Iraqi not Chinese 👍

  • @NullCyan
    @NullCyan Před 2 měsíci +1

    that's a very very clever number system, considering you were writing this on clay, it could be used easily as tally marks

  • @peaceswapnil
    @peaceswapnil Před 6 lety +12

    Thank you so much for teaching this.

  • @42moxies
    @42moxies Před 3 lety +4

    This is so quick and accurate. Nicely done.

  • @Ellipsis115
    @Ellipsis115 Před rokem +4

    Note to self:
    I think learning just the number systems 1-101 for a bunch of languages would be a really cool party trick so I could always say I know a little bit of each language and just write 3 or 4 different numbers or ask the person to pick a number 1-100 or as I'd learnt 101 I could probably go a bit beyond.
    Additionally, knowing how the characters work for a given language is important, like with cuneiform [pronounced cune-iform apparently?] I know that 1 character is made up of multiple lines and it seems that they are slightly more complex sounds more like syllables like "ra" instead of "r" just from looking up the numbers and I understand the basic different methods of writing it etc. Whereas when I look at a Chinese character I don't understand if it's a word unto itself or if its just a sound or if its a syllable or such.
    2:57 So it's literally just rotated 45 degrees and the reed is more evenly pushed into the clay?

  • @Pamela-zo9sl
    @Pamela-zo9sl Před 6 lety +8

    Very clear and well explained, thanks.

  • @cafearga
    @cafearga Před 5 lety +38

    I forgot how unnerving chalkboards were.

    • @NullCyan
      @NullCyan Před 2 měsíci

      maybe I'm weird because I like how it sounds

  • @elmerfudd5650
    @elmerfudd5650 Před 5 lety +7

    I Love this stuff! Thank you!

  • @keevancrawford6708
    @keevancrawford6708 Před 4 měsíci

    Brilliant. Those are fractals of units using the 3-6-9 Tesla referenced.
    The

  • @SonnyJim173
    @SonnyJim173 Před 2 lety

    Watching the 4th kind has sent me down a rabbit hole of ancient languages and writing at 3am I need to go to sleep smh

  • @Bushehri1
    @Bushehri1 Před rokem +2

    An amazing video ty so much professor ❤️

  • @slehar
    @slehar Před 3 lety

    Is this related to the Babylonian way of counting on their fingers? Using your right thumb as a pointer, count the three segments of your pinkie 1,2,3, then the three segments on your third finger, 4,5,6, then the three segments of your right middle finger, 7,8,9, three rows of three segments, just as in the cuneiform.

  • @Duchess_Van_Hoof
    @Duchess_Van_Hoof Před 5 lety +4

    Huh, simple, straightforward and pedagogical. Not to mention interesting. So in practice you only need to learn the symbols for 1 and 10, and the rest follows naturally?

  • @garethpincott8820
    @garethpincott8820 Před 5 lety +8

    I follow how the positional system explained here allows you to write 59 or 61 without the need for a 0, but how do you distinguish a 60 from a 1 without a modifier? Does it follow the form of 50 as shown and then change?

    • @Cypeq
      @Cypeq Před rokem

      That is the only way that makes sense just six diagonal wedges

  • @the-birbo
    @the-birbo Před 2 lety +1

    why wouldn't you modify the font so that it's written with the same amount of strokes as when it's written with a stylus in clay? I cant understand needing to know that deepest part of the make, but that's pretty much like how Hanzi has the little mark at the beginning of the stroke because of the brush, so when using a pen we just simulate the stroke with a little pull to the side rather than makin an fat outline where that mark would be if we were using a brush, yknow?

  • @johnnyjoestar850
    @johnnyjoestar850 Před 2 měsíci

    WE MAKING IT OUT OF MESOPOTAMIA WITH THIS ONE

  • @Gio-mi3hd
    @Gio-mi3hd Před 2 lety

    are there any reason why cuneiform have horizontally or vertically line with triangle? or it is just the way it look

  • @chayasusannegolan797
    @chayasusannegolan797 Před 5 lety +26

    Thank you for this interesting lecture! How would Babylonians distinguish between 2, 61, and 120?

    • @simontillson482
      @simontillson482 Před 5 lety +5

      Chaya Susanne Golan - i wondered about that too. Maybe they have an empty placeholder? Controversially, that could also be thought of as zero? Apparently indian or arabic peoples first came up with zero as a real concept, but surely, these simple, practical issues make it likely the basic idea of using zero probably came way before we used it in mathematics? Even if it was only represented by a bit of a gap or blank space in script, it seems to need to exist in any positional number system.

    • @matexmatematica
      @matexmatematica Před 4 lety +4

      I believe 61 would be easy to see, having a space between the sign for 60 and the sign for 1. But what would be the difference between 1 or 60? 2 ir 120? A dot ir another sign tô separate those values would be enough. Did they use It? What sign?

    • @PeterMydlo
      @PeterMydlo Před 4 lety +3

      they distinguished it through the text it was written in. so 2 and 61 were only the two dashes, but from text you could tell if it was 2 or 61. only later they left some space in the number, and yet later they had a diagonal sign i think.

    • @PoleToPoleTravel
      @PoleToPoleTravel Před 3 lety

      @@PeterMydlo Came to say the same haha. It's interesting how spacing wasn't thought of (or at least used by scribes) earlier.

    • @hiwhowhatareyoudoinghereme1974
      @hiwhowhatareyoudoinghereme1974 Před 2 lety

      𒌋𒌋𒌋𒌋𒌋𒌋… the cuneiform keyboard doesn’t have all the numbers, or I would write it out

  • @user-sx5pq3by8k
    @user-sx5pq3by8k Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you, I'm from Iraq.

    • @umi214
      @umi214 Před 3 lety +1

      nice. that's our history

  • @SlapShotRegatta22
    @SlapShotRegatta22 Před 5 měsíci

    What happens if you're trying to express the number 1 vs the number 60? Wouldn't they get confused?

  • @richardbello5732
    @richardbello5732 Před 4 lety +3

    Do you have a video on the writing words in the Sumarian language written and verbal

  • @Krishna13847
    @Krishna13847 Před 9 měsíci

    on google i found base only till 36 and no other website is answering. where to find base more than 36?

  • @hugo_vega_1
    @hugo_vega_1 Před 4 lety +1

    This is cool thank you 🙏🏽

  • @nqinadlamini
    @nqinadlamini Před 6 lety +6

    Thank you

  • @stevenv6463
    @stevenv6463 Před rokem

    Did they usually write left to right?

  • @amrakless
    @amrakless Před 4 lety +4

    I have nit understood however how do you make a simple 60 or a 61...up to 69?

    • @klaasbil8459
      @klaasbil8459 Před 3 lety +1

      Good question. For that you need a zero symbol, but I don't know if they had that.

  • @spiritualisautembellator8399

    The system, as presented here, is very ambiguous since there are different interpretations for each representation. There must be some sort of sign or separating space for positions in the base 60 positional system, as in any positional number system, as in the usual decimal or binary systems. If this aspect is not clarified, the system is useless because it is not well defined.

    • @Dj2xP
      @Dj2xP Před 2 lety +4

      "useless" haha, Babylonians were among the best astronomers in history thanks to their base 60 system.
      Numberphile has a video explaining the 'missing 0' I think though.

    • @trackerbuckmann1627
      @trackerbuckmann1627 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Dj2xP That's not what he's saying.

    • @Dj2xP
      @Dj2xP Před 2 lety

      @@trackerbuckmann1627 ok

    • @anak5880
      @anak5880 Před rokem

      @@Dj2xP I think that they're saying that here the positional system used by the Babylonians isn't explained as clearly. Because we know that if you wanted to mean "60" instead of "1", there had to be some space; to identify the different positions (which defined if that was a "1" or a "60"). In another comment you answered, you even mention the lines used to identify those columns; which is also a very important thing to remember about this system (and that wasn't mentioned). He probably meant that in this video that, and other facts were vaguely explained.

  • @abhishekmhatre1554
    @abhishekmhatre1554 Před 3 lety +4

    I think I have gained more appreciation for the Hindu-Arabic system after watching this video.

  • @genevievetauro6531
    @genevievetauro6531 Před 6 lety

    Cute learning experience indeed!

  • @RA36912
    @RA36912 Před 2 lety

    At the end you was writing 260 units.
    So your saying four 60's has its own number unit and then you added 2 tens to make it 260 ?

  • @lexierowe2340
    @lexierowe2340 Před 3 lety

    I don’t understand how that first symbol in “261” comes to 240, could you explain further please?

    • @OwenSmithOgg
      @OwenSmithOgg Před 3 lety

      the mark represents 4 and it's in the 60 column so 4*60=240

  • @paligbardizbanian4474
    @paligbardizbanian4474 Před 2 lety

    I didn't understand the end part where you were saying 260 and so on.

  • @rick43pen
    @rick43pen Před 6 lety +3

    So how was the difference shown between 1 and 60? Size?

    • @SephNite
      @SephNite Před 5 lety +3

      If you watch to the end of the video you'll see that it's a positional system, meaning that where each wedge is placed determines which type of unit it represents. A single-wedge to the left of a ten-wedge means it represents a unit of 60, while a single-unit to the right of a ten-wedge means it represents a unit of 1.

    • @gketchup777
      @gketchup777 Před 3 lety

      @@SephNite A single unit left to the 10-wedge would mean 70 (|

  • @anj265
    @anj265 Před 4 lety

    Im just confusing, how do we differentiate 2 (2 vertical marks) and 120 ( 2 times of 60 as well 2 vertical marks)

    • @melanieturquoise1111
      @melanieturquoise1111 Před 4 lety +1

      Hiya! Hope you're well! I ran your comment a few times over in my head. I'm now learning this and I just done this on paper, I got this. 1 vertical mark, 5 tens and 1 ten = 120. Tell me if you understood that.

  • @rubeegeorgealset6412
    @rubeegeorgealset6412 Před 5 lety

    how about larger numbers ????

  • @user-xo7sr9wn9m
    @user-xo7sr9wn9m Před 3 lety

    Iraq from the heart to the heart💜💜💜💜💜💜💕💕💕💕

  • @wugglenup44
    @wugglenup44 Před 11 lety +2

    Is there a symbol to make larger numbers like in the thousands

  • @queensabina9983
    @queensabina9983 Před 2 měsíci

    Imagine how long time it took to write those numbers 😁

  • @zainio
    @zainio Před 6 lety +2

    Can some explain to me why they switch symbols after 9? Why did they consider that as being the limit for repeating the flags?
    I would assume it has to do with how we got to the decimal system because of 10 digits on our hands but idk why they've done the same if they're in base 60.
    Thanks.

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Před 6 lety

      They switched cause your a moron. Also they wrote all this by chizeling into clay. The clay chips only in certain ways along it's crystaline allignment axes. PS you're a dumbass for asking this.

    • @ericmueller6836
      @ericmueller6836 Před 6 lety +8

      Garry Sekelli The clay was soft when they made IMPRESSIONS in it. The numer system is sub-base 10. This not only saves space on these small tables, but also... you have 10 fingers and its a natural counting unit.
      But... They could make the 60s unit deeper, or taller to emphasize its value. Also, please learn some basic arts-and-crafts before attempting CZcams comments. Being a giant douche helps no one.

  • @aladdinbenokba6127
    @aladdinbenokba6127 Před 3 lety

    Babylonian was in Iraq , Arab people have created the first civilization on the face of the Earth 🌍. They invited our nowadays numbers as well , in addition to the Alphabet system was invited by Arabic civilizations .

  • @AstekOst
    @AstekOst Před 6 lety +1

    How do you write 120 then for example? Do you just write 2 or what? If you get my question

    • @mohammedfaidhy1142
      @mohammedfaidhy1142 Před 6 lety

      yes !!... and 61 !!

    • @ChameeraDedduwage
      @ChameeraDedduwage Před 5 lety

      120 would be written as 2-10, and 61 would be written as 1-10-1.

    • @kabivose
      @kabivose Před 5 lety

      @@ChameeraDedduwage where did those "10"s come from?
      2-10 would be 2×60 +10 = 130 and
      1-10-1 would be 1×60 + 10 + 1 = 71
      There was an ambiguity.
      3 could mean 3, 180,.1080 etc
      61 would use space to indicate no tens. 1 1 Not a perfect system and it led to mistakes. It would be easy to tweak the system by having a zero, or a vertical line between "digits", and maybe a sexagesimal point. I don't know why they didn't do either. They could generate huge pythagorean triples but not divide by 7. A lot about their mathematics is very alien.

    • @geffhome
      @geffhome Před 6 měsíci

      Or have actual digits for each digit…

  • @WojciechDomalewski
    @WojciechDomalewski Před 5 měsíci

    What does she mean by "Babylonian"?

  • @YawnGod
    @YawnGod Před 12 lety +8

    @yaoifanXXkaya The 60 looks like a 1 just like the 1 in 100 looks like a 1.
    100 is really 1 hundreds, 0 tens, 0 ones: 100. It's nearly the same in Babylonian, except instead of base 10, it's base 60 with a base 10 within it. The 1h 24 minutes example is more easily understood as 84 minutes. So you have 1 sixty, 2 tens, 4 ones: 84.
    The 1 in front of two 10s is 60, just like 1 hour = 60 minutes. 1h 24m means 60m + 24m.
    This is all pretty simple stuff when it comes down to it.

    • @bushchat28d
      @bushchat28d Před 5 lety

      Not really. When I see 100 I know its 100 - how do I know their base 60 symbol for 60 isn't actually a 1 or that their 61 isn't actually 2?

    • @anfelsarabouachat8338
      @anfelsarabouachat8338 Před 4 lety

      What if it was 60 ? Do we write the symbole of one or write 6 times symbole of ten?

    • @Dj2xP
      @Dj2xP Před 2 lety +1

      @@bushchat28d That's because in their day they wrote on little clay stones that fit in their hand and they would not start 1 in the middle of the stone.
      Considering this I believe it would be easy to identify if it was 1 or 60. Also when looking at photos, a lot of times they draw column lines which also helps indicate the positional value of the horizontal mark.

  • @MahendraJagatkarx88
    @MahendraJagatkarx88 Před 6 lety

    assassin's creed 2 brought me here

  • @abelglennandes909
    @abelglennandes909 Před 6 lety +1

    i love MATH

  • @hakhaimo
    @hakhaimo Před 6 měsíci

    Hmmm interesting. How can I write 1,000,000 with that?

  • @switzerlandful
    @switzerlandful Před 6 lety +2

    I guess 60 goes 6 times into 360.

  • @switzerlandful
    @switzerlandful Před 6 lety +1

    INteresting.
    I've been very curious about the origins of math, systems of measurements and other things. But I have a Q.
    She just said... 60, just like we count minutes and seconds... and degrees of angles? But I thought degrees of angles divided within 360. Why would she say 60?

    • @WolfgangBernady
      @WolfgangBernady Před 6 lety +1

      A full circle is divided into 6*60=360 degrees (there is 60 in there also, but that's beside the point). Every one of those degrees is divided further into 60 minutes, (similar to the time of one hour). Every one of those minutes is divided into 60 seconds (again similar to the time of 1 minute is 60 seconds). Check out the location of places on the globe (if you believe in such a thing) E.g. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London in the top right, written in very small letters I see this: Coordinates: 51°30′26″N 0°7′39″W that means 51degrees, 30 minutes, 26 seconds North, and zero degrees, 7 minutes and 39 seconds West. ( Applies to a spherical-globe view of the world ).
      I am not suggesting at all that you would hold a belief contrary to this, I just could not resist for the sake of humour.

    • @switzerlandful
      @switzerlandful Před 6 lety

      Oh ok. Ya. So either they knew or suspected that the earth was spherical or maybe they inherited this system from a culture or civilization that knew it. I'm reading "Uriel's Machine" by Christopher Knight. He talks about the 360 system and about evidence that suggests even more ancient cultures already knew the polar and equatorial circumferences of earth. To a fairly hi degree of accuracy.

    • @switzerlandful
      @switzerlandful Před 6 lety +1

      Also interesting is how when you take 360 and double it, you get 720. 72 is supposedly the number of years it takes a star to move 1 degree in the sky. Double that and you get 144. 144,000 is the number of days in a Maya baktun one of the diff calendars. These number always add up to 9 aswell. Any number like 72, 36 or 144 whose digits add up to 9 are therefore divisible by 9 or 3. (also i think the Maya used another calendar that was 270 days... about the time of human gestation?)

    • @WolfgangBernady
      @WolfgangBernady Před 6 lety

      I just found this: you might be interested in the middle part starting at about 7:50
      czcams.com/video/rtm0KW2mGyg/video.html

    • @switzerlandful
      @switzerlandful Před 6 lety

      I was just noticing that quite a few numbers divide into 360 evenly.
      1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 15, 18, 20, 24, 30, 36, 40, 45, 60, 72, 90, 120, 180

  • @ThatisnotHair
    @ThatisnotHair Před 2 měsíci

    This is most inefficient of all numeral. The amount of time, energy and muscle pain takes is unreal. Makes sense they aren't used to large numbers

  • @user-re3zu1yj3z
    @user-re3zu1yj3z Před 2 lety +1

    אני גאה בך

  • @nnsllvn2
    @nnsllvn2 Před 2 lety

    isn't it read right to left ?

  • @5_70r
    @5_70r Před rokem +1

    It is the language of the Iraqi ancestors

  • @truesun
    @truesun Před rokem

    interesting system

  • @erdincmaster
    @erdincmaster Před rokem

    thanks.

  • @ilarilindholm
    @ilarilindholm Před 4 lety

    Interesting . 😼😼😼😼😼 .

  • @sueharker589
    @sueharker589 Před 4 lety +1

    So how is an even 60 represented, I wonder.

    • @user-hh2is9kg9j
      @user-hh2is9kg9j Před 4 lety

      2:58 probably using 6 tens on top of each other like the 50 and 40. I am guessing though.

  • @dodososo164
    @dodososo164 Před 3 lety

    يجنن صوتها

  • @ReactanceIsFutile
    @ReactanceIsFutile Před 2 lety

    Unfortunately, throwing the whole Historical Society in an Uproar--- 60 can be written by taking the single '6' digit and rotating it's Sumerian cuneiform symbol clockwise 45-degrees...

  • @kevincronin6393
    @kevincronin6393 Před 6 lety +3

    could you pronounce the numbers please

    • @rchuso
      @rchuso Před 5 lety +1

      psd.museum.upenn.edu/nepsd-frame.html - also shows the pronunciation.

  • @smiedranokatirova5987
    @smiedranokatirova5987 Před 4 lety

    Iraqi proud

  • @user-ny6oo9jp7f
    @user-ny6oo9jp7f Před 3 lety +1

    It's also

  • @ashur3504
    @ashur3504 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm Assyrian native Aramiac speaker yet we still don't have a way to write numbers 😅 we still use letters or we will use English numbers for writing

    • @user-gd4uu8ox7r
      @user-gd4uu8ox7r Před 2 lety

      هذه الأرقام ليست اشورية بل هذه ارقام حضارة بابل

    • @ashur3504
      @ashur3504 Před 2 lety

      @@user-gd4uu8ox7r شنو هو الفرق بين الاشوري والبابلي اسم الشعب هو اشوري بابل المدينه وليس قوم اخر عيني انت قومي تك بغداديه واحد ثاني من بصره قوميته بصراويه؟ 💀 اني كاتب لحد الان ما عندنا طريقه للكتب الارقام مثل عربي أو فارسي أو انگليزي نستعمل احرف باللغه الاشوريه لحد الان

  • @fernandorobertodemoura674

    Muy obligado

  • @thelight5351
    @thelight5351 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm Babylonian

  • @plinyelder8156
    @plinyelder8156 Před 4 lety

    Babylon 5

  • @ThatisnotHair
    @ThatisnotHair Před 2 měsíci

    How are they going to distinguish multiples of 60?😂

  • @Cypeq
    @Cypeq Před rokem

    Weird how base 10 is this Babylonian base 60

  • @rosolinolosciuto3865
    @rosolinolosciuto3865 Před 4 lety

    Dualismo matematico

  • @DanishRahm
    @DanishRahm Před měsícem

    Thanks

  • @klaasbil8459
    @klaasbil8459 Před 3 lety

    Do we count degrees of angle in base 60? Don't think so. An angle of 60 degrees is somewhat of a special case, but IMHO not the base.

    • @Dj2xP
      @Dj2xP Před 2 lety +1

      60° * 6 = 360° which is a circle, well look at that.
      Any more than that and it's back to 1°

  • @samoxigen2667
    @samoxigen2667 Před 6 lety +1

    How about 201 or 2001

  • @evil4896
    @evil4896 Před 3 lety

    im babylonian :)

  • @sulaimanalakwaa2532
    @sulaimanalakwaa2532 Před 6 lety +3

    عراقنا

    • @minamalek5422
      @minamalek5422 Před 6 lety

      Sulaiman Al Akawa, Yo meant to say ASSYRIAN. All this knowledge come from Assyrian empire. Not Arabs, or certainly Kurds.

    • @sulaimanalakwaa2532
      @sulaimanalakwaa2532 Před 6 lety +1

      عليك أن تعرفي انا السومرين و الاشورين والبابلين هم كلدان
      وان كنعان هم سكان بلاد الشام لبنان و سوريا وفلسطين من اعظم الشعوب في الملاحة
      وقد قدم الشعبين من جنوب جزيرة العرب
      حسب المؤرخ الإغريقي هيرودوتس
      والبحار اليوناني سيكلاس الذي عمل بحار في جيش القائد داريوس الأول

    • @XXRolando2008
      @XXRolando2008 Před 6 lety +1

      You have to know that I am the Sumerians, the Assyrians, and the Babylonians.
      Canaanites are the inhabitants of the Levant, Lebanon, Syria and Palestine are among the greatest peoples in navigation.
      The two peoples were introduced from the south of the Arabian Peninsula,
      According to the Greek historian Herodotus.
      And the Greek sailor Seklas, who served as sailor in the army of Commander Darius I.
      thanks google translate.

    • @Kookayo3435
      @Kookayo3435 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sulaimanalakwaa2532 كلمتني وكنعنان ظهروا وره سومر مو قبل سومر ف شلون ذا اصلهم ؟

  • @rosolinolosciuto3865
    @rosolinolosciuto3865 Před 4 lety

    I numeri sono universali per tutti uguali, a che serve la filosofia dopo trenta secoli di Ateofobia

  • @federicoguillermodellelicn7360

    silim gen--na

  • @danlupsa
    @danlupsa Před 5 lety

    How about zero?

    • @spookink6553
      @spookink6553 Před 5 lety

      I think it will be just an small horizontal line on the top and one long vertical line

    • @Dj2xP
      @Dj2xP Před 2 lety

      2 diagonal dashes

  • @user-ep1yt6sp7l
    @user-ep1yt6sp7l Před 5 lety +4

    عراقي

  • @federicoguillermodellelicn7360

    si les interesa sumero les mando el link czcams.com/video/fpp84kWJQdw/video.html

  • @flioink
    @flioink Před 3 lety

    That system works with small numbers only, but then again, there wasn't much of anything 4000 years ago.

  • @bluegame7385
    @bluegame7385 Před rokem

    How to pronounce?

  • @mosakarem2012
    @mosakarem2012 Před 8 lety +7

    I'm Arabic teacher

  • @Kotikjeff
    @Kotikjeff Před 4 lety

    261? Base 60. Not counting in hundreds. Sounds incorrect to me. 4 sixties. 2 tens and a one. Explain please.

    • @tcdrx
      @tcdrx Před 3 lety

      4x60= 240
      2x10= 20
      1x1=1
      240 + 20 +1 = 261

    • @geffhome
      @geffhome Před 6 měsíci

      Sure. The issue is that is 3 digits. In base 60, it (should) only take 2 digits. One for the 240 part and one for the 21 part.
      Doesn’t seem like the Babylon number system is base 60 positional. (Even if it is base 60)

  • @user-gd4uu8ox7r
    @user-gd4uu8ox7r Před 2 lety

    التاريخ بلاد الرافدين

  • @ameenmendelawy8586
    @ameenmendelawy8586 Před 3 lety +2

    Our great iraqi civilization 🙂❤

  • @user-hh2is9kg9j
    @user-hh2is9kg9j Před 4 lety

    I see the birth of the decimal system here. How come they say it was developed in India? it has internal decimal and they use positional notation system like our Arabic numbers.

  • @hobbeeguy6811
    @hobbeeguy6811 Před 2 lety

    Something was cut out at 4:08, it would be better if we got to follow along instead of figuring out the answer at the end and go back....

  • @honoriuc
    @honoriuc Před 4 lety

    The speed of light 299,792,458 m/s in the base 60 is just N7tew.

  • @bulldawg4498
    @bulldawg4498 Před 4 lety +1

    I always wondered how the Babylonian base-60 number system worked ... Mystery solved ...

  • @cruisecontrol4922
    @cruisecontrol4922 Před 4 lety

    Arabic Numerals all day every day.

  • @Gerona_Family
    @Gerona_Family Před 7 měsíci

    𒆜

  • @TheEyez187
    @TheEyez187 Před 2 lety

    How is it spoken though!?

  • @user-fi2dc4sg9p
    @user-fi2dc4sg9p Před rokem

    It was knocked out!!!!!!!!!
    Awesome!!!!! We don't have to learn this notation

  • @AliHassAn-sz3it
    @AliHassAn-sz3it Před 2 lety

    ترجمه اكو إلى العربي

  • @josephpaulfreije9109
    @josephpaulfreije9109 Před 6 lety +1

    I am a Phrygian. You can't tell me what I am. You only tell yourself you can.

  • @shahidjamal7111
    @shahidjamal7111 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank God , Arabs invented the numerals !

    • @updown9697
      @updown9697 Před 4 lety

      The Arabs didn't even invented the numerals plus Babylonians are not arab

    • @iliayttuzine3482
      @iliayttuzine3482 Před 3 lety

      @@updown9697 but they look like arabs and their language has many similarities with arabic

    • @updown9697
      @updown9697 Před 3 lety +1

      @@iliayttuzine3482 but they're still not arab

    • @iliayttuzine3482
      @iliayttuzine3482 Před 3 lety

      @@updown9697 i feel that you hate arabs, is that true ?

    • @updown9697
      @updown9697 Před 3 lety +1

      @@iliayttuzine3482 nope, I'm just saying trying to say the truth that Babylonians were not arab because the Babylonians today are modern day Iraqi and Iraqis are not arab by blood it's only by culture so it's mean they're arabinized not arab by blood so Babylonians were not arab since that time Arabs from gulf never conquer modern day Iraq in that time

  • @reem11739
    @reem11739 Před 2 lety

    منو عاايش

  • @altrey520
    @altrey520 Před 4 lety

    So with as advanced as they were they too forgot about zero...

  • @bass_2
    @bass_2 Před 3 lety

    Mam what is 100

  • @deffet
    @deffet Před rokem

    bruh, cuneiform is bad writing in the 21st century, because it has to be written with wedges, not with chalk