Selected Product: | Chaos: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) Paperback Author: Leonard Smith Publisher: OUP Oxford Release Date: February 2007 ISBN-10: 0192853783 ISBN-13: 9780192853783 List Price: £7.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Chaos: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Leonard Smith (ISBN-10: 0192853783, ISBN-13: 9780192853783). At this time we have not yet written a review for Chaos: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Leonard Smith (ISBN-10: 0192853783, ISBN-13: 9780192853783). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Interesting but not easy | Customer Rating: | I was looking for a relaxed read on the tube. This book was more substantial and quite a lot heavier going than the title implies.
I didn't find this book all that easy to read even though I have studied economics, mathematics and physics to quite a high level. | Interesting, but not a very short introduction | Customer Rating: | This book aims to introduce the key concepts of chaos in a readable way, including no mathematics. The title is a bit misleading, since there are over 160 pages and the book covers some quite advanced concepts. Overall, the book attempts to cover too much material for a short introduction, and I feel that readers who are not already familiar with the topic will be left confused.
The first chapter leaps directly into the concepts of deterministic nonlinear systems and sensitive dependence, and includes a wide-ranging discussion of the work of scientists including Laplace, Newton, Franklin and Darwin.
The second chapter explains exponential growth nicely, with several examples. Chapter 3 introduces examples of dynamical systems and their associated concepts. Here, new concepts such as state space, fixed points and attractors arise very rapidly and I wonder whether they have time to sink in for the reader who is not already familiar with them. Some of the new concepts are not clearly defined.
Chapter 4, 'Chaos in mathematical models', describes the universal period-doubling cascade, the Lorenz system, the Henon map, delay equations and Hamiltonian chaos. Again, too many models are introduced too rapidly. Chapters 5 and 6 cover fractals, dimensions and Lyapunov exponents, the measures of chaos, and the book then moves on to real numbers on a computer, statistics, predictability, weather forecasts, climate change and finance, ending up with some philosophical remarks.
Although I quite enjoyed reading this book, I would not recommend it as an introduction to the subject.
| Good. But you need a preliminary | Customer Rating: | | The book introduces the chaos theory relatively in details (compared with "the quantum world" J.P which introduces the entire structure of quantum physics less than 90 pages). The chaos is a very new and popular theory. It is based on the dynamical system, or dating back further, integral by I.Newton. The book itself produces nothing extremely exciting but progressively, makes you learn a lot. I find it really helpful to scan the dynamical system part in my financial math textbook before reading it. My suggestion is that you understand some concepts on integral and dynamical system first. They may be rather naive compared with the chaos theory but they at least give you a basis to develop your thoughts. | A Great Introduction | Customer Rating: | | A very readable introduction for anyone interested in nonlinear dynamics, time series, weather forecasting or climate modelling. |
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