How to Free Your Inner Mathematician: Notes on Mathematics and Life

Awards:   Winner of Winner, 2023 Euler Book Prize, Mathematical Association of America.
Author:   Susan D'Agostino (Council for the Advancement of Science Writing; Taylor/Blakeslee Fellow, Council for the Advancement of Science Writing; Taylor/Blakeslee Fellow, Johns Hopkins University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198843597


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   26 March 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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How to Free Your Inner Mathematician: Notes on Mathematics and Life


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Awards

  • Winner of Winner, 2023 Euler Book Prize, Mathematical Association of America.

Overview

How to Free Your Inner Mathematician: Notes on Mathematics and Life offers readers guidance in managing the fear, freedom, frustration, and joy that often accompany calls to think mathematically. With practical insight and years of award-winning mathematics teaching experience, D'Agostino offers more than 300 hand-drawn sketches alongside accessible descriptions of fractals, symmetry, fuzzy logic, knot theory, Penrose patterns, infinity, the Twin Prime Conjecture, Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, Fermat's Last Theorem, and other intriguing mathematical topics. Readers are encouraged to embrace change, proceed at their own pace, mix up their routines, resist comparison, have faith, fail more often, look for beauty, exercise their imaginations, and define success for themselves. Mathematics students and enthusiasts will learn advice for fostering courage on their journey regardless of age or mathematical background. How to Free Your Inner Mathematician delivers not only engaging mathematical content but provides reassurance that mathematical success has more to do with curiosity and drive than innate aptitude.

Full Product Details

Author:   Susan D'Agostino (Council for the Advancement of Science Writing; Taylor/Blakeslee Fellow, Council for the Advancement of Science Writing; Taylor/Blakeslee Fellow, Johns Hopkins University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.20cm
Weight:   0.534kg
ISBN:  

9780198843597


ISBN 10:   0198843593
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   26 March 2020
Audience:   Adult education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Further / Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1: Mix up your routine, as cicadas with prime number cycles 2: Grow in accessible directions, like Voronoi diagrams 3: Rely on your reasoning abilities, because folded paper may reach the moon 4: Define success for yourself, given Arrow's Impossibility Theorem 5: Reach for the stars, just like Katherine Johnson 6: Find the right match, as with binary numbers and computers 7: Act natural, because of Benford's Law 8: Resist comparison, because of chaos theory 9: Look all around, as Archimedes did in life 10: Walk through the problem, as on the Konigsborg bridges 11: Untangle problems, with knot theory 12: Consider all options, as the shortest path between two points is not always straight 13: Look for beauty, because of Fibonacci numbers 14: Divide and conquer, just like Riemann sums in calculus 15: Embrace change, considering non-Euclidean geometry 16: Pursue an easier approach, considering the Pigeonhole Principle 17: Make an educated guess, like Kepler with his Sphere-packing Conjecture 18: Proceed at your own pace, because of terminal velocity 19: Pay attention to details, as Earth is an oblate spheroid 20: Join the community, with Hilbert's 23 problems 21: Search for like-minded math friends, because of the Twin Prime Conjecture 22: Abandon perfectionism, because of the Hairy Ball Theorem 23: Enjoy the pursuit, as Andrew Wiles did with Fermat's Last Theorem 24: Design your own pattern, because of the Penrose Patterns 25: Keep it simple whenever possible, since 26: Change your perspective, with Viviani's Theorem 27: Explore, on a Mobius strip 28: Be contradictory, because of the infinitude of primes 29: Cooperate when possible, because of game theory 30: Consider the less-travelled path, because of the Jordan Curve Theorem 31: Investigate, because of the golden rectangle 32: Be okay with small steps, as the harmonic series grows without bound 33: Work efficiently, like bacteriophages with icosahedral symmetry 34: Find the right balance, as in coding theory 35: Draw a picture, as in proofs without words 36: Incorporate nuance, because of fuzzy logic 37: Be grateful when solutions exist, because of Brouwer's Fixed Point Theorem 38: Update your understanding, with Bayesian statistics 39: Keep an open mind, because imaginary numbers exist 40: Appreciate the process, by taking a random walk 41: Fail more often, just like Albert Einstein did with 42: Get disoriented, on a Klein bottle 43: Go outside your realm of experience, on a hypercube 44: Follow your curiosity, along a space-filling curve 45: Exercise your imagination, with fractional dimensions 46: Proceed with care, because some infinities are larger than others

Reviews

I could describe the essays in this collection as inspiring and motivational, but that wouldn't quite communicate the validation I felt reading them... [the book] draws upon the theorems, applications, and history of mathematics to inspire lessons and advice for us along our mathematical (and other) pursuits. Delightful illustrations and an (honestly) enjoyable exercise accompany each essay. This book will appeal to aspiring mathematicians at any career stage, but its most important audience may be the latent mathematicians who have been discouraged from the discipline but are open to a fresh invitation. * Jason Cory Brunson, Research Assistant Professor, Laboratory for Systems Medicine, University of Florida, New Books Network *


I could describe the essays in this collection as inspiring and motivational, but that wouldn't quite communicate the validation I felt reading them... [the book] draws upon the theorems, applications, and history of mathematics to inspire lessons and advice for us along our mathematical (and other) pursuits. Delightful illustrations and an (honestly) enjoyable exercise accompany each essay. This book will appeal to aspiring mathematicians at any career stage, but its most important audience may be the latent mathematicians who have been discouraged from the discipline but are open to a fresh invitation. * Jason Cory Brunson, Research Assistant Professor, Laboratory for Systems Medicine, University of Florida, New Books Network * This book is a great entry point for the curious student wondering about the world around them, a wonderful reference guide for the parent, a reminder for the working engineer, or an enjoyable read for anyone seeking to update their understanding. It reminds us how elegantly math helps make sense of the world - and that success is in the eye of the beholder! * Joseph J. Helble, Provost and Professor of Engineering, Dartmouth College * Few things are as beautiful, fascinating and revealing about life and important to its pursuit as mathematics. This elegantly written book makes mathematics alive and accessible, without compromise, with charm, clarity, grace, and wit. This book should fall into the hands not only of all students, but all adults. Readers will not only be grateful, but will smile along the way. * Leon Botstein, Bard College President, American Symphony Orchestra Conductor, & author of Jefferson's Children: Education and the Promise of American Culture * This delightful book contains precious nuggets of mathematics rendered accessible to most by connecting them to real life and engaging the reader in artfully paced steps. What is truly unique about this book, however, is the way D'Agostino infuses it with her humanity, making it as fun and instructive as it is wise. * Christophe Gole, Smith College Professor of Mathematics & Statistics * In life, as in mathematics, a fresh approach is sometimes warranted. D'Agostino intertwines life's lessons with those gleaned from a stunning array of mathematical gems to forge a vision of mathematics that is both personal and universal. * Rhonda Hughes, Professor Emerita of Mathematics, Bryn Mawr College * Marvelous mathematical meditations. D'Agostino leads the reader to discover their mathematical selves through self-contained explorations. Appropriate for mathematical novices, enthusiasts, professionals, or anyone willing to reflect on the truth, beauty, and joy of mathematics. * Jennifer J. Quinn, President Elect of Mathematical Association of America 2021-2022, Professor of Mathematics, UW Tacoma, & author of Proofs That Really Count: The Art of Combinatorial Proof * I never knew I could find math so entertaining! I loved not just bending my mind around concepts I can actually use in my life but learning about some of the mathematicians and history behind them. D'Agostino's clever illustrations are a big plus! * Nancy Lord, former Alaska writer laureate & author of Fishcamp and Beluga Days * In an era of excellent books about mathematics for a popular audience, this book stands out, for its spirit, imagination, and liveliness. * Paul Campbell, Beloit College, The Hastings Center Report *


In an era of excellent books about mathematics for a popular audience, this book stands out, for its spirit, imagination, and liveliness. * Paul Campbell, Beloit College, The Hastings Center Report * I never knew I could find math so entertaining! I loved not just bending my mind around concepts I can actually use in my life but learning about some of the mathematicians and history behind them. D'Agostino's clever illustrations are a big plus! * Nancy Lord, former Alaska writer laureate & author of Fishcamp and Beluga Days * Marvelous mathematical meditations. D'Agostino leads the reader to discover their mathematical selves through self-contained explorations. Appropriate for mathematical novices, enthusiasts, professionals, or anyone willing to reflect on the truth, beauty, and joy of mathematics. * Jennifer J. Quinn, President Elect of Mathematical Association of America 2021-2022, Professor of Mathematics, UW Tacoma, & author of Proofs That Really Count: The Art of Combinatorial Proof * In life, as in mathematics, a fresh approach is sometimes warranted. D'Agostino intertwines life's lessons with those gleaned from a stunning array of mathematical gems to forge a vision of mathematics that is both personal and universal. * Rhonda Hughes, Professor Emerita of Mathematics, Bryn Mawr College * This delightful book contains precious nuggets of mathematics rendered accessible to most by connecting them to real life and engaging the reader in artfully paced steps. What is truly unique about this book, however, is the way D'Agostino infuses it with her humanity, making it as fun and instructive as it is wise. * Christophe Gole, Smith College Professor of Mathematics & Statistics * Few things are as beautiful, fascinating and revealing about life and important to its pursuit as mathematics. This elegantly written book makes mathematics alive and accessible, without compromise, with charm, clarity, grace, and wit. This book should fall into the hands not only of all students, but all adults. Readers will not only be grateful, but will smile along the way. * Leon Botstein, Bard College President, American Symphony Orchestra Conductor, & author of Jefferson's Children: Education and the Promise of American Culture * This book is a great entry point for the curious student wondering about the world around them, a wonderful reference guide for the parent, a reminder for the working engineer, or an enjoyable read for anyone seeking to update their understanding. It reminds us how elegantly math helps make sense of the world - and that success is in the eye of the beholder! * Joseph J. Helble, Provost and Professor of Engineering, Dartmouth College * I could describe the essays in this collection as inspiring and motivational, but that wouldn't quite communicate the validation I felt reading them... [the book] draws upon the theorems, applications, and history of mathematics to inspire lessons and advice for us along our mathematical (and other) pursuits. Delightful illustrations and an (honestly) enjoyable exercise accompany each essay. This book will appeal to aspiring mathematicians at any career stage, but its most important audience may be the latent mathematicians who have been discouraged from the discipline but are open to a fresh invitation. * Jason Cory Brunson, Research Assistant Professor, Laboratory for Systems Medicine, University of Florida, New Books Network *


Author Information

Susan D'Agostino is a mathematician and writer whose essays have been published in Quanta Magazine, Scientific American, Financial Times, Nature, Undark, Times Higher Education, Chronicle of Higher Education, Math Horizons, Mathematics Teacher, and others. She earned her PhD in Mathematics from Dartmouth College, Master of Arts in Teaching Mathematics from Smith College, and BA in Anthropology from Bard College. She is a Council for the Advancement of Science Writing Taylor/Blakeslee Fellow at Johns Hopkins University. Her website is www.susandagostino.com and her Twitter handle is @susan_dagostino.

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