
Advertisements for the wildly popular game of Sudoku often feature the reassuring words, "no mathematical knowledge required." In fact, the only skill Sudoku does require is the use of mathematical logic. For many people, anxiety about math is so entrenched, and grade school memories so haunting, that these disclaimers - though misleading - are necessary to avoid intimidating potential buyers. In A Brief History of Mathematical Thought, Luke Heaton provides a compulsively readable history that situates mathematics within the human experience and, in the process, makes it more accessible. Mastering math begins with understanding its history. Heaton's book therefore offers a lively guide into and through the world of numbers and equations-one in which patterns and arguments are traced through logic in the language of concrete experience. Heaton reveals how Greek and Roman mathematicians like Pythagoras, Euclid, and Archimedes helped shaped the early logic of mathematics; how the Fibonacci sequence, the rise of algebra, and the invention of calculus are connected; how clocks, coordinates, and logical padlocks work mathematically; and how, in the twentieth century, Alan Turing's revolutionary work on the concept of computation laid the groundwork for the modern world. A Brief History of Mathematical Thought situates mathematics as part of, and essential to, lived experience. Understanding it does not require the application of various rules or numbing memorization, but rather a historical imagination and a view to its origins. Moving from the origin of numbers, into calculus, and through infinity, Heaton sheds light on the language of math and its significance to human life.
This book investigates the historical development of mathematical thought to demonstrate that mathematics is an inherent part of human experience rather than a collection of abstract, intimidating rules. Luke Heaton, drawing on his background in the history of ideas, presents a narrative framework that traces the evolution of logic from ancient civilizations to the modern digital age. By contextualizing mathematical concepts within their historical origins, he argues that understanding the development of these ideas is the most effective way to demystify the subject for the general reader.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Readers frequently note that the prose is accessible and avoids the dense jargon often found in academic mathematical histories. Experts highlight this work as a successful bridge between historical narrative and conceptual explanation for those seeking to overcome math anxiety.
Page Count:
330
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190621796
ISBN-13:
9780190621797
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