- Ron Eglash
Infobox Scientist
name = Ron Eglash
image_width = 203
caption = Ron Eglash working with children in the Yup'ik village ofAkiachak, Alaska
birth_date =
birth_place =
residence =
citizenship =United States
nationality = American
ethnicity =
field =Mathematics Information Technology
work_institutions =Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Ohio State University
alma_mater =University of California, Santa Cruz
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for =Ethnomathematics
prizes =Ron Eglash (born
December 25 ,1958 inChestertown, MD ) is an American cyberneticist, university professor, and author widely known for his work in the field ofethnomathematics , which aims to study the diverse relationships between math and culture. His research includes the use offractal patterns in African architecture, art, and religion, and the relationships betweenindigenous cultures and modern technology, such as that between Native American cultural and spiritual practices andcybernetics . He holds a Bachelor's degree in Cybernetics, a Master's in Systems Engineering, and a Ph.D. in History of Consciousness, all from the University of California. A Fulbright fellowship enabled his postdoctoral field research on African ethnomathematics, which was later published in the book "African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design".Dr. Eglash has also conducted studies in teaching children math and computing through simulations of indigenous and vernacular cultural practices. He explains that the simulations do not impose math externally, but rather translate the mathematical ideas already present in the cultural practices to their equivalent form in school-taught math. Examples include transformational geometry in
cornrow braiding,spiral arcs ingraffiti , least common multiples in percussion rhythms, and analytic geometry in Native American beadwork. His approach is one of many attempts to draw the inspiration to learn out of students' own cultural backgrounds.He also studies social justice issues as they manifest in the practice of science and technology, ranging from the ethnic identity of “
nerds ” to the so-called appropriation of science and technology by groups disempowered on the bases of race, class, gender. Another branch of this research explores how the “bottom-up” egalitarian principles found in many indigenous cultures could be applied to modern society in fields from economics to political science.He has served as a senior lecturer in comparative studies at
Ohio State University , and currently works as an Associate Professor in the Department of Science and Technology Studies atRensselaer Polytechnic Institute , where he has taught courses on Science and Social Theory, the History of Information Technology, and a design studio for the Product Design and Innovation program.Publications
# African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design (June 1999)
# Appropriating Technology: Vernacular Science and Social Power (September 2004) "(co-editor)"External links
* [http://www.rpi.edu/~eglash/eglash.htm Ron Eglash's Homepage]
* [http://www.ccd.rpi.edu/Eglash/csdt/african.html Creating designs with African fractals]
* [http://www.haussite.net/haus.0/SCRIPT/txt2001/01/eglash.HTML African influence in Cybernetics]
* [http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/ron_eglash_on_african_fractals.html Video: Ron Eglash speaks on Fractals in African Architecture and Divination]
* [http://www.ccd.rpi.edu/Eglash/csdt/african/CORNROW_CURVES/index.htm Transformational Geometry and Iteration in Cornrow Hairstyles]
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