permacomputing

Source repository for the main permacomputing wiki site
git clone http://git.permacomputing.net/repos/permacomputing.git # read-only access
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commit 88cad81d1e1c0132d92c7c97edcd72cc62e0187e
parent 58de7f16d0e44aa802bd400ba213449e0c4dd4e8
Author: Ville-Matias Heikkila <viznut@low.fi>
Date:   Sat, 13 Aug 2022 11:42:46 +0300

add page

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Aethnomathematics.mdwn | 30++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)

diff --git a/ethnomathematics.mdwn b/ethnomathematics.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +**Ethnomathematics** is the study of the relationships of mathematics and +culture, with a specific focus on the mathematical thinking of indigenous or +"non-literate" peoples. **Ethnocomputing** is an offshoot of +ethnomathematics that does the same thing with computing. In practice, both +ethnomathematics and ethnocomputing are most often connected with education, +with the belief that using familiar concepts from one's own cultural +background will lead to better learning results. + +Ethnocomputing and ethnomathematics are relevant to permacomputing +particularly from the point of view of [[technological diversity]]. How we +currently conceptualize computing is a result of specific historical and +cultural conditions, and the cultural basis is actually getting narrower due +to [[siliconization]]. Ethnomathematics and ethnocomputing can be used to +reveal this narrowness as well as to help imagine a greater diversity of +options. They may also help envision deeper [[historical|history]] roots to +algorithmic, computational and mathematical thinking – they're much older +and much more universal than commonly thought in the eurocentric +techno-progressivist narrative. + +NOTE: While cultural appropriation is usually not a big concern in +theoretical computer science topics, it is possible to use ethnocomputing in +problematic ways that make it a concern. One should be careful and +respectful when using and representing computational or mathematical +concepts from different cultures. + +Some interesting examples: + +* Many traditional divination systems (I Ching, Geomancy, Ifá) use binary combinatorics, i.e. give meanings to 3-, 4-, 6- and 8-bit binary sequences. +* The quipu/khipu recording system of Andean peoples, based on strings and knots, has been studied as an example of a complex indigenous data structure. +* Fractal-like recursion and self-similarity are very prominent in African arts. This is a central theme in Ron Eglash's seminal ethnomathematics book "African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design".