Real Deep Roots Of AI And Modern Technology

Abdul Ghani
ILLUMINATION
Published in
2 min readNov 21, 2023
A Soviet postage stamp (issued 6 September 1983) commemorating al-Khwārizmī’s (approximate) 1200th birthday

We think of an algorithm as something new, but the term actually dates back about 900 years.

The word algorithm comes from the name of a Persian mathematical genius, Muhammad ibn Musa al-khwarizmi. He was born around 780 AD in the region now known as Uzbekistan. His name suggests that he came from Khwarizm.

Known as al-khwarizmi, he was a director in the House of Wisdom, an intellectual centre for scholars in 9th-century Baghdad.

He made innovative contributions to mathematics, astronomy, geography and cartography, and wrote an influential book called “Concerning The Hindu Art Of Reckoning

300 years later, the book was rediscovered and translated into Latin. It introduced Hindu-Arabic numerals to the West, which eventually replaced the unwieldy Roman ones.

The Hindu-Arabic number system, along with the decimal point, both described by al-khwarizmi in his book, are the basis of the numbers we use throughout the world today.

Al-Khwarizmi’s name, when Latinised in the title of the book, became algoritmi. And this is the origin of the word “Algorithm

We also have al-khwarizmi to thank for the word “Algebra”, which comes from another of his works. His book revolutionised mathematics in the West, showing how complex problems could broken down into simpler parts and solved.

In medieval Latin, algorismus simply meant the decimal number system. By the 13th century, it had become the English word and was used by Chaucer.

But it wasn’t until the late 19th century that the word algorithm came to mean a set of step-by-step rules for solving problems. In the early part of the 20th century, Alan Turing, a British mathematician and computer scientist, worked out how, in theory, a machine could follow algorithmic instructions and solve complex mathematics.

This was the birth of the computer age. During World War II, he built a machine called “Bombe” which used algorithms to crack the enigma code.

Today algorithm is a fairly common term, even if sometimes you’re not exactly sure what an algorithm does. Algorithms are everywhere now, helping us to get from A to B, driving internet searches, and making recommendations of things for us to buy, watch or share.

And predicting how we vote or who we fall in love with, This little word that originated in medieval Persia is gradually transforming our lives.

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Abdul Ghani
ILLUMINATION

I’m mostly a software engineer with a passion for science, mysteries, religions, myths, films, and novels.