Abstract
The article reflects the state of mathematics between the natural sciences and the humanities. By arguing that mathematics is a humanities subject, it suggests a close connection between mathematics and urban morphology studies. This also applies to the discrepancy between quantitative and qualitative methodological approaches. New types of research based on quantitative methods reveal previously unknown aspects of urban phenomena. They will play an increasingly important role in future research, and it is a challenge for the humanities to effectively integrate mathematical perspectives on the human habitat.
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COMPOSITO - Arthistorical Analysis of Architecture via Computer Vision is a project conducted by Björn Ommer, Peter Bell and Michael Arnold at the Heidelberg Collaboratory for Image Processing.
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ArchiMediaL is a cooperation between historians of architecture and urban form (Carola Hein, Beate Loeffler, Tino Mager, Dirk Schubert) and computer scientists (Victor de Boer, Jan van Gemert, Seyran Khademi, Ronald Siebes). URL: http://archimedial.eu.
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The historical images are from the collection of Stadsarchief Amsterdam and available at Beeldbank Amsterdam. URL: http://beeldbank.amsterdam.nl.
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Mager, T., Hein, C. (2019). Mathematics and/as Humanities–Linking Humanistic Historical to Quantitative Approaches. In: D'Acci, L. (eds) The Mathematics of Urban Morphology. Modeling and Simulation in Science, Engineering and Technology. Birkhäuser, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12381-9_27
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12381-9_27
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