David Edwin Pingree (January 2, 1933 - November 11, 2005), late University Professor and Professor of History of Mathematics and Classics at Brown University, was one of America's foremost historians of the exact sciences in antiquity. Events 366 - The Alamanni cross the frozen Rhine River in large numbers invading the Roman Empire. Year 1933 ( MCMXXXIII) was a Common year starting on Sunday (link will display full calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Events 308 - The Congress of Carnuntum: Attempting to keep peace within the Roman Empire, the leaders of the Tetrarchy declare Year 2005 ( MMV) was a Common year starting on Saturday (link displays full calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Brown University is a highly esteemed private University located in Providence, Rhode Island and is a member of the Ivy League. He had joined the History of Mathematics Department at Brown University in 1971, eventually holding the chair until his death on November 11, 2005. He was born in New Haven, Connecticut on January 2, 1933, graduated from Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts in 1950 and thereafter attended Harvard University, where he earned his doctorate in 1960 with a dissertation on the transmission of Hellenistic astrology to India. Phillips Academy (also known as Phillips Andover or PA or simply Andover) is a co-educational University preparatory school for boarding Hellenistic astrology is a tradition of Horoscopic astrology that was developed and practiced in Hellenistic Egypt and the Mediterranean, whose His unique collection of material on the history of mathematics was acquired by Brown University.
Recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1975 and a MacArthur Fellowship in 1981, he was a member of the Society of Fellows at Harvard, the American Philosophical Society, and the Institute for Advanced Study; he was also A. Guggenheim Fellowships are American grants that have been awarded annually since 1925 by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who The MacArthur Fellows Program or MacArthur Fellowship (sometimes Nicknamed the "genius grant") is an award given by the John D The American Philosophical Society is a discussion group founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin as an offshoot of his earlier club the Junto. The Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton New Jersey, United States is a center for theoretical research D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University from 1995.
As successor to Otto Neugebauer (1899-1990) in Brown’s History of Mathematics Department (which Neugebauer established in 1947), Pingree numbered among his colleagues men of extraordinary learning, especially Abraham Sachs and Gerald Toomer. Otto Eduard Neugebauer ( May 26 1899 &ndash February 19 1990) was an Austrian - American Mathematician and
Jon McGinnis of the University of Missouri, St. Louis describes Pingree’s life-work thus:
Pingree's mastery of “dead” languages was perhaps unsurpassed in his generation, and students were awed and charmed by the depth of humanistic, mathematical, and scientific learning which he brought to bear (and expected of them) in his teaching. He is perhaps most renowned for his expertise in Jyotihshastra, the Indian science which encompasses astronomy, astrology, mathematics, and divination. The literature on the classical system of Indian astrology known as Jyotiṣa (by which term is also meant not only the science of Astronomy but also the Vedanga He authored numerous book-chapters and articles, and some of his more important works include Babylonian Planetary Omens (with Erica Reiner: Brill, Leiden 2005), Census of the Exact Sciences in Sanskrit (5 vols. , American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia 1970 et seq. ), and Arabic Astronomy in Sanskrit: Al-Birjandī on Tadhkira II, Chapter 11 and its Sanskrit Translation (with Takanori Kusuba: Brill, Leiden 2002).
In June, 2007 the Brown University Library acquired Pingree's personal collection of scholarly materials. The collection focuses on the study of mathematics and exact sciences in the ancient world, especially India, and the relationship of Eastern mathematics to the development of mathematics and related disciplines in the West. The collection contains some 22,000 volumes, 700 fascicles, and a number of manuscripts. The holdings consist of both antiquarian and recent materials published in Sanskrit, Arabic, Hindi, and Western languages.
http://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau/2006-07/06-180.html