ABSTRACT

An almost obsessional use of numbers characterizes Japanese popular culture. A wide variety of numerical formulae and strategies provide the means for explaining events and solving problems occurring in everyday life. These include such matters as the choice of the name for a child, ranking in almost any game or sport, the diagnosis and cure of illness or the decision to accept a new job. This text provides a general study of the field of Japanese popular numeracy. It introduces the reader to a world of numbers in which fortune-telling, the abacus and games involving numbers, as well as curious numerical names (of both people and places), illustrate the importance of systems of counting, calculation and forecasting. The study explores the cultural roots of attitudes towards numbers and makes suggestions about the contemporary implications of a culture in which mechanical numeracy (and number obsession) is general but the highest levels of academic mathematics still fall short of world standards.

chapter 1|13 pages

The numerical paradox

chapter 2|19 pages

Numbers in the written and spoken language

chapter 3|13 pages

Alternative number systems

chapter 4|17 pages

The culture of numbers

chapter 5|13 pages

What’s in a Japanese name?

chapter 6|20 pages

Fortune-telling

chapter 7|18 pages

Time

chapter 8|12 pages

The spatial world of numbers

chapter 9|13 pages

The Japanese abacus

chapter 10|16 pages

Games—ancient and modern

chapter 11|8 pages

The ecology of numbers—past and present