Medieval Arabic algebra is a good example of an artificial language.Yet despite its abstract, formal structure, its utility
was restricted to problem solving. Geometry was the branch of mathematics used for expressing theories. While algebra was
an art concerned with finding specific unknown numbers, geometry dealtwith generalmagnitudes.Algebra did possess the generosity
needed to raise it to a more theoretical level—in the ninth century Abū Kāmil reinterpreted the algebraic unknown “thing”
to prove a general result. But mathematicians had no motive to rework their theories in algebraic form. Because it offered
no advantage over geometry, algebra remained a practical art in both the Islamic world and in Europe until the scientific
uphevals of the 17th–18th centuries.
Keywords Arabic algebra - artificial language - generosity - Abū Kāmil