“In Reckonings linguistic anthropologist Stephen Chrisomalis takes his lay audience on a sweeping cross-cultural journey through the vast domain of ideas and principles underlying quantitative reckoning. Philologists will delight in his early chapters on the rise and fall of Roman numerals, while anthropologists and archaeologists will find their place in the closing chapter.”
Dr. Anthony Aveni, Russell Colgate Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, Colgate University
“The extraordinary variety of systems of numerical notation attested across the world is a source of ongoing puzzlement. In Reckonings an expert in the field of ethnomathematics mounts a powerful argument for going beyond purely intellectualist modes of explanation (in terms of some supposedly easily determinable criterion of 'efficiency') to insist on the need for a detailed exploration of the ways in which cognitive constraints interact with social, economic, and technological ones. The vindication of the comparative method that this affords carries important lessons for anthropology, history, cognitive science, and more generally for cross-cultural understanding—as vital a desideratum for us today as it has ever been.”
Sir G. E. R. Lloyd, University of Cambridge
“For a fresh account of the hows and whys of evolving number systems over the past 5500 years and on into the future, here's a book by cognitive anthropologist Stephen Chrisomalis. His threefold approach in Reckonings is to examine number with respect to structure, purpose, and transience, and in doing so, he cautiously avoids overgeneralizing, ever mindful that the Latin maxim exceptio probat regulam ought to be translated as 'the exception probes the rule.' Thus, Chrisomalis habitually inserts curious richness into his narrative.”
The Mathematical Intelligencer
“Stephen Chrisomalis has written a compelling and thoroughly entertaining account of how numbers came to be used and represented. [... ] I strongly recommend this book for readers interested in the broad sweep of human history from an information lens. [... ] Reckonings serves as an enlightening example of how the fundamentals of information cannot be understood by a single discipline.”
Information & Culture
“Reckonings is one of those oddities in academia. A highly specialist, niche publication that somehow manages to be entertaining and relevant for people who have little expertise or interest in the central topic. [... ] Like a good ethnographic account, the headline is merely the starting point for an interrogation of society. Chrisomalis uses numbering systems to explore broader issues of cognition and culture. [... ] Reckonings takes its readers on an historical tour to understand important changes in the use of number systems that is an exemplar for how we might integrate diachronic and synchronic data and methodologies to better understand change in any cultural system.”
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
“Chrisomalis has written a compelling and thoroughly entertaining account of how historically numbers came to be used and represented. The book serves as an enlightening example of how the fundamentals of knowledge cannot be understood by a single discipline; they require the complementarity of several knowledge fields such as philosophy, sociology, and education. We strongly and enthusiastically recommend this book to all readers interested in the broad understanding of human history, as well as the history of human mathematics, from these informational lenses.”
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
“[A]s detailed as the most ardent number-nerd could wish....Its comparative perspective is a credible rejoinder to the current anthropological antipathy toward cross-cultural analyses. Its interdisciplinary insights are adeptly synthesized. The prose is light, sparkling, and often humorous, the explanations of even the most complex theoretical points clear, succinct, unobtrusive, and timely. All in all, Reckonings is a masterful work surely destined to become a classic of the anthropological literature.”
Journal of Anthropological Research
“The book has the tone of public scholarship á la Steven Pinker or Jared Diamond rather than a volume exclusively for professional anthropologists, although its material may be challenging for the average reader. For anthropologists, it also achieves two other noteworthy things: it supports and offers a method for cross-cultural and transhistorical comparison (transcending the universalist/particularist dichotomy), and it urges anthropology to take number systems more seriously rather than consigning them to a distant second place behind language.”
Ethos