The first six chapters and Appendix 1 of this book appeared in Japanese
in a book of the same title 15years aga (Jikkyo, Tokyo, 1980).At the
request of some people who do not wish to learn Japanese, I decided to
rewrite my old work in English. This time, I added a chapter on the
arithmetic of quadratic maps (Chapter 7) and Appendix 2, A Short Survey
of Subsequent Research on Congruent Numbers, by M. Kida. Some 20 years
ago, while rifling through the pages of Selecta Heinz Hopj (Springer,
1964), I noticed a system of three quadratic forms in four variables
with coefficientsin Z that yields the map of the 3-sphere to the
2-sphere with the Hopf invariant r =1 (cf. Selecta, p. 52). Immediately
I feit that one aspect of classical and modern number theory, including
quadratic forms (Pythagoras, Fermat, Euler, and Gauss) and space
elliptic curves as intersection of quadratic surfaces (Fibonacci,
Fermat, and Euler), could be considered as the number theory of
quadratic maps-especially of those maps sending the n-sphere to the
m-sphere, i.e., the generalized Hopf maps. Having these in mind, I
deliveredseverallectures at The Johns Hopkins University (Topics in
Number Theory, 1973-1974, 1975-1976, 1978-1979, and 1979-1980). These
lectures necessarily contained the following three basic areas of
mathematics: v vi Preface Theta Simple Functions Aigebras Elliptic
Curves Number Theory Figure P.l.