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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David BerlinskiPublisher: Random House USA Inc Imprint: Random House Inc Volume: 22 Dimensions: Width: 13.00cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 20.20cm Weight: 0.188kg ISBN: 9780812978711ISBN 10: 0812978714 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 08 January 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Inactive Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsFor mathematically challenged folk like me, David Berlinski comes again to help with a thin volume that, like his A Tour of the Calculus, renders mathematics not easy, but accessible and absorbing. He portrays through history how mathematical thought evolved, from the genius of the few to its application by the many. Personalities, times, cultures, and opportunities all play their dramatic roles and Berlinski, knowing how they interacted, brings them vividly to life. You ll enjoy yourself. Paul McHugh, Distinguished Service Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University This is literary science at its best. I was charmed by this top-down and introspective presentation of the subject of mathematics. It is not just highly readable; because it is one step above the subject, it can even inspire the professional. Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Dean s Professor in the Sciences of Uncertainty, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, author of Fooled by Randomness A humorous and graceful short history of mathematics, quite deceptively easy to read. Berlinski is actually a sophisticated insider, and every page of this book glows with his love of mathematics and with his sardonic appreciation for humanity s foibles. Gregory Chaitin, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, author of Meta Math! The Quest for Omega From the Hardcover edition. For mathematically challenged folk like me, David Berlinski comes again to help with a thin volume that, like his A Tour of the Calculus, renders mathematics not easy, but accessible and absorbing. He portrays through history how mathematical thought evolved, from the genius of the few to its application by the many. Personalities, times, cultures, and opportunities all play their dramatic roles and Berlinski, knowing how they interacted, brings them vividly to life. You'll enjoy yourself. -Paul McHugh, Distinguished Service Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University This is literary science at its best. I was charmed by this top-down and introspective presentation of the subject of mathematics. It is not just highly readable; because it is one step above the subject, it can even inspire the professional. -Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Dean's Professor in the Sciences of Uncertainty, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, author of Fooled by Randomness A humorous and graceful short history of mathematics, quite deceptively easy to read. Berlinski is actually a sophisticated insider, and every page of this book glows with his love of mathematics and with his sardonic appreciation for humanity's foibles. -Gregory Chaitin, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, author of Meta Math! The Quest for Omega From the Hardcover edition. For mathematically challenged folk like me, David Berlinski comes again to help with a thin volume that, like his A Tour of the Calculus, renders mathematics not easy, but accessible and absorbing. He portrays through history how mathematical thought evolved, from the genius of the few to its application by the many. Personalities, times, cultures, and opportunities all play their dramatic roles and Berlinski, knowing how they interacted, brings them vividly to life. You'll enjoy yourself. <br>-Paul McHugh, Distinguished Service Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University <br> This is literary science at its best. I was charmed by this top-down and introspective presentation of the subject of mathematics. It is not just highly readable; because it is one step above the subject, it can even inspire the professional. <br>-Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Dean's Professor in the Sciences of Uncertainty, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, author of Fooled by Randomness <br> A humorous and graceful short history of mathematics, quite deceptively easy to read. Berlinski is actually a sophisticated insider, and every page of this book glows with his love of mathematics and with his sardonic appreciation for humanity's foibles. <br>-Gregory Chaitin, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, author of Meta Math! The Quest for Omega <p> From the Hardcover edition. For mathematically challenged folk like me, David Berlinski comes again to help with a thin volume that, like his A Tour of the Calculus, renders mathematics not easy, but accessible and absorbing. He portrays through history how mathematical thought evolved, from the genius of the few to its application by the many. Personalities, times, cultures, and opportunities all play their dramatic roles and Berlinski, knowing how they interacted, brings them vividly to life. You'll enjoy yourself. -<b>Paul McHugh</b>, Distinguished Service Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University This is literary science at its best. I was charmed by this top-down and introspective presentation of the subject of mathematics. It is not just highly readable; because it is one step above the subject, it can even inspire the professional. -<b>Nassim Nicholas Taleb</b>, Dean's Professor in the Sciences of Uncertainty, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, author of Fooled by Randomness A humorous and graceful short history of mathematics, quite deceptively easy to read. Berlinski is actually a sophisticated insider, and every page of this book glows with his love of mathematics and with his sardonic appreciation for humanity's foibles. -<b>Gregory Chaitin</b>, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, author of Meta Math! The Quest for Omega <i>From the Hardcover edition.</i> Author InformationDavid Berlinski received his Ph.D. from Princeton University and has taught mathematics, philosophy, and English at Stanford, Rutgers, the University of Puget Sound, and the Université de Paris at Jussieu. He has been a research fellow at both the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria and the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques in France. His many books have been translated into more than a dozen European and Asian languages. His essays in Commentary have become famous. A senior fellow at the Discovery Institute in Seattle, he lives and works in Paris. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |