Bajri, S.Hannah. J.Montelle, C.2016-01-312016-01-312015Bajri, S., Hannah. J., Montelle, C. (2015) Revisiting Al-Samaw'al’s table of binomial coefficients: Greek inspiration, diagrammatic reasoning and mathematical induction. Archive for History of Exact Sciences, 69(6), pp. 537-576.http://hdl.handle.net/10092/11738In a famous passage from his al-Bahir, al-Samaw'al proves the identity which we would now write as (ab)^n = a^n b^n for the cases n = 3; 4. He also calculates the equivalent of the expansion of the binomial (a + b)^n for the same values of n, and describes the construction of what we now call the Pascal Triangle, showing the table up to its 12th row. We give a literal translation of the whole passage, along with paraphrases in more modern or symbolic form. We discuss the influence of the Euclidean tradition on al-Samaw'al's presentation, and the role that diagrams might have played in helping al-Samaw'al's readers follow his arguments, including his supposed use of an early form of mathematical induction.enIslamic algebraGreek influencediagrammatic reasoningmathematical inductionthe Pascal trianglebinomial theoremRevisiting Al-Samaw'al’s table of binomial coefficients: Greek inspiration, diagrammatic reasoning and mathematical inductionJournal ArticleFields of Research::49 - Mathematical sciences::4904 - Pure mathematics::490401 - Algebra and number theoryhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00407-015-0156-x