The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 5, 
No. 28,
by Various 
 
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February, 1860, by Various This eBook is for the use of anyone 
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Title: The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 5, No. 28, February, 1860 
Author: Various 
Release Date: December 2, 2006 [EBook #19995] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
ATLANTIC MONTHLY *** 
 
Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine Paolucci and the Online 
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produced from images generously made available by Cornell 
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THE 
ATLANTIC MONTHLY. 
A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS. 
VOL. V.--FEBRUARY, 1860.--NO. XXVIII. 
 
Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected. Footnotes have 
been moved to the end of the article. 
 
COUNTING AND MEASURING. 
Though, from the rapid action of the eye and the mind, grouping and 
counting by groups appear to be a single operation, yet, as things can 
be seen in succession only, however rapidly, the counting of things, 
whether ideal or real, is necessarily one by one. This is the first step of 
the art. The second step is grouping. The use of grouping is to 
economize speech in numeration, and writing in notation, by the 
exercise of the memory. The memorizing of groups is, therefore, a part 
of the primary education of every individual. Until this art is attained, 
to a certain extent, it is very convenient to use the fingers as 
representatives of the individuals of which the groups are composed. 
This practice led to the general adoption of a group derived from the 
fingers of the left hand. The adoption of this group was the first distinct 
step toward mental arithmetic. Previous groupings were for particular 
numerations; this for numeration in general; being, in fact, the first 
numeric base,--the quinary. As men advanced in the use of numbers, 
they adopted a group derived from the fingers of both hands; thus ten 
became the base of numeration. 
Notation, like numeration, began with ones, advanced to fives, then to 
tens, etc. Roman notation consisted of a series of signs signifying 1, 5, 
10, 50, 100, 500, 1000, etc.,--a series evidently the result of counting
by the five fingers and the two hands, the numbers signified being the 
products of continued multiplication by five and by two alternately. 
The Romans adhered to their mode, nor is it entirely out of use at the 
present day, being revered for its antiquity, admired for its beauty, and 
practised for its convenience. 
The ancient Greek series corresponded to that of the Romans, though 
primarily the signs for 50, 500 and 5000 had no place. Ultimately, 
however, those places were supplied by means of compound signs. 
The Greeks abandoned their ancient mode in favor of the alphabetic, 
which, as it signified by a single letter each number of the arithmetical 
series from one to nine separately, and also in union by multiplication 
with the successive powers of the base of numeration, was a decided 
improvement; yet, as it consisted of signs which by their number were 
difficult to remember, and by their resemblance easy to mistake, it was 
far from being perfect. 
Doubtless, strenuous efforts were made to remedy these defects, and, 
apparently as the result of those efforts, the Arabic or Indian mode 
appeared; which, signifying the powers of the base by position, reduced 
the number of signs to that of the arithmetical series, beginning with 
nought and ending with a number of the value of the base less one. 
The peculiarity of the Arabic mode, therefore, in comparison with the 
Greek, the Roman, or the alphabetic, is place value; the value of a 
combination by either of these being simply equal to the sum of its 
elements. By that, the value of the successive places, counting from 
right to left, being equal to the successive powers of the base, 
beginning with the noughth power, each figure in the combination is 
multiplied in value by the power of the base proper to its place, and the 
value of the whole is equal to the sum of those products. 
The Arabic mode is justly esteemed one of the happiest results of 
human intelligence; and though the most complex ever practised, its 
efficiency, as an arithmetical means, has obtained for it the reputation 
of great simplicity,--a reputation that extends even to the present base, 
which, from its intimate and habitual association with the mode, is
taken to be a part of the mode itself. 
With regard to this impression it may be remarked, that the qualities 
proper to a    
    
		
	
	
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