Mathematics From The Birth Of Numbers Free Pdf Download
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There is infinite beauty in mathematics and numbers!
Infinity in mathematics is catered for through recurring patterns and concepts, consider Pi and how it extends to infinite decimal places. When I say beauty, I think about how numbers can translate to graphical interpretation with multiple dimensions, each with unique relationships and transformations. Picture the very precise yet artistic language of symbols and formatting, especially the Greek alphabet and its evolution from the Ph
NumerationThere is infinite beauty in mathematics and numbers!
Infinity in mathematics is catered for through recurring patterns and concepts, consider Pi and how it extends to infinite decimal places. When I say beauty, I think about how numbers can translate to graphical interpretation with multiple dimensions, each with unique relationships and transformations. Picture the very precise yet artistic language of symbols and formatting, especially the Greek alphabet and its evolution from the Phoenician alphabet.
I love traditional poetry where we marvel at the efficient and skilful formation of words to enchant our minds with glorious images. In terms of the ability to transform simple notation and symbols into multi-dimensional fractious patterns and images, mathematics is the ultimate poetic language.
Mathematics has a raw, honest and perfect beauty. Witness the power of the simple symbol =, which conveys balance, equilibrium and pure logic. How we strive for balance in our lives. The world exists with the reassurance and satisfaction that logic will prevail. There is a tendency to assume because mathematics is challenging and heavily utilised in science and technology, that we forget its impact on other aspects of nature, culture and history. Galileo Galilei stated, "Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe."
The book Mathematics from the Birth of Numbers, by Jan Gullberg, is a fascinating book that offers a different and informative look at mathematics. We have become fixated with learning how to deliver the usefulness that we no longer try to appreciate the true understanding and beauty. Jan Gullberg enables us to discover the cultural birth and evolution of numbering systems, and the almost mystical and mythical association with numbers such as seven as in the 7 arms of the Hebrew candelabra, the 7 wonders of the world, the 10 commandments, abstention for 40 days and nights during Lent, the 40 years the children of Israel wandered the desert, and Ali Baba and the 40 thieves. Numbers have a habit of repeating and appearing in very different circumstances.
This book covers notation and numbering systems from our ancient past. It reviews numeration from ancient languages dating back thousands of years BC to the most utilised numbering system in the world today – binary - as in computer code. The contents cover the history, background, definition and functionality for all mathematics from algebra to trigonometry, geometry, matrices, calculus, sequences & series, probability and statistics. It is not a how-to book for mathematical formula and methods, it is an evocative story of the birth, growth and maturity of numbers and mathematical techniques.
This is a history book dealing with the origins of numbers and mathematics. This is a mathematics book steeped in a wealth of history. A book that you will want to dip in and out of on a regular basis, it's probably not one you will read from cover to cover but it is a beautiful compendium of information and knowledge.
I would highly recommend this book, especially to those that love logic, history and mathematics.
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If you've ever wanted to get further into the math world for its own sake but find it difficult to get going, this is a great place to start.
This is how math should be taught. A top down approach as opposed to rote, with a lot of interesting history and random information to keep it interesting.. it's "why is this interesting / worthwhile and how does it fit in" vs "memorize this or fail."If you've ever wanted to get further into the math world for its own sake but find it difficult to get going, this is a great place to start.
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It is also quite amazing that the author's occupation was a practitioner of surgery.
One would never completely finish such a volume; rather, (s)he would peruse the pages carefully and quietly, with a pencil in the hand, getting lost in the glimpse of the huge discipline of mathematics that the author has so generously bestowed.It is also quite amazing that the author's occupation was a practitioner of surgery.
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First, it is partly a history of mathematics. Beginning wit
This is truly an ambitious book. To discuss "Mathematics From the Birth of Numbers" in a single volume when entire textbooks--entire libraries, even--have been devoted to topics covered in but one chapter of this book seems like an impossible challenge. To some extent it is, and to some extent, the author succeeded admirably. It depends on what one means by the discussion of mathematics. This book spans many of those different endeavors.First, it is partly a history of mathematics. Beginning with the first chapter, the author discusses the origin of numbers themselves (albeit briefly) and guides the reader through an increasingly well-developed mathematical landscape culminating with a treatment of differential equations. Is it a complete history? Not at all. It is developed well enough to give the reader a taste of how mathematics occurred throughout the past centuries, but it would not serve as a primary text for a course in the history of mathematics. What it lacks in depth, however--as I'll say repeatedly--it makes up for in breadth. Few textbooks on the history of mathematics could cover as many subjects as are handled by this book, making it a perfect supplementary text.
Second, it is partly a course in mathematics. Again, the breadth requires a certain lack of depth. Ostensibly the reader without much mathematical experience *could* learn mathematics from this book. However, the development of ideas is more rapid than most students would be able to keep up with. Readers wishing to actually learn mathematics would be better served buying several textbooks: one or two each on their topics of interest. However, it again makes a wonderful supplementary text because it collects the bare bones of all of those sub-disciplines between the same two covers. Additionally, it provides the beginning student of mathematics with a truly marvelous and extensive survey of the field. The student who doesn't know whether s/he wants to read a book next on probability theory, combinatorics, or differential equations would be extraordinarily well-served by this book's tantalizing overviews.
Third, it is a remarkable reference. Once more, while such a broad book cannot be encyclopedic on any one topic, it does make for a good book to keep on hand whenever one needs to refresh one's memory of the basics of any number of mathematical topics. Because it's both a course and a history, furthermore, I found it contained some information that most other books on mathematics omit. When I (yes, even in the twenty-first century) wanted to learn how to perform more advanced operations than mere counting on my abacus, this book was my first reference. Similarly, students who grew up in the age of computers might be interested, if for no other reason than historical curiosity, to read the section explaining the correct operation of a slide rule. Regarding the use of this book as a reference, the reader should be aware that, while the vast majority of the notation is fairly standard, I did notice a few instances in which the author uses different notation from that to which I'm accustomed from my own mathematical education.
Mostly, we can consider this book a single portrait of what one might consider to be elementary (meaning high-school and early undergraduate) mathematics. No, it doesn't contain as many proofs as I would like and no, it doesn't have the exercises that would make it a more effective (if twice as long) pedagogical tool. But it is still a remarkable book because it manages to collect all of that content into a *single* portrait. In so doing, the author helps the reader to observe the connections between the various disciplines of mathematics and for that reason, this book deserves our attention and respect.
The reader with absolutely no mathematical experience will probably find this to be a difficult read, but if you have even a little bit of background in mathematics, I think you will (as I did) find it to be a delightful and entertaining book well worth keeping in your personal or professional library.
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This is a very quirky and personal book on math written by a doctor (I think) who has always been interested in mathematics. It's part history, part reference, part cartoons.
Every time I cracked the book open, there was something interesting, whether it was the history of
I bought this on a whim at Bookbuyers in Mountain View and only read a few parts of it. I'm marking it as read since I gave it to my daughter's math teacher to help her class with their projects on math in ancient civilizations.This is a very quirky and personal book on math written by a doctor (I think) who has always been interested in mathematics. It's part history, part reference, part cartoons.
Every time I cracked the book open, there was something interesting, whether it was the history of estimates of pi or a primer on Taylor expansions and trigonometric functions.
The layout reminds me of early LaTeX-formatted handouts I used to get in college with all the equations and that strange Bookman kind of font. I wouldn't be surprised if this book is self-published, which in no way detracts from its awesomeness.
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Along with the mathematics, it covers some history of the particular subject being done, with the important people who brought forth the developments necessary and the important works that they were covered in.
For ins
Excellent tome on general mathematics from counting all the way to differential equations. Contains examples galore. If you aren't satisfied after all of this, it contains an extensive bibliography for further reading. The book also contains an index to help find things in the text.Along with the mathematics, it covers some history of the particular subject being done, with the important people who brought forth the developments necessary and the important works that they were covered in.
For instance, in the section on Trigonometry it explains that the word Trigonometry is not actually a native Greek word and that the term was invented by a German mathematician and astronomer named Bartholomaeus Pitiscus back in 1595. It goes on to cover important developments, how they used it and relevant problems. This book is a wonderful addition to a library if you can afford it. Though it is more of a reference guide really, it does contain a good deal of history.
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The only better guide to math I am aware of is the Princeton Companion. It is more comprehensive, but less quirky and personal.
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This is a rich source of mathematical history and formulas for both maths and non maths enthusiasts alike.
Based on other reviews I would have to agree it serves very well as a good reference point as it can take time to digest some of the contents.
Highly recommended!
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Mathematics From The Birth Of Numbers Free Pdf Download
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