Selected Product: | Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea Paperback Edition: New Ed Author: Charles Seife Publisher: Souvenir Press Ltd Release Date: October 2000 ISBN-10: 0285635948 ISBN-13: 9780285635944 List Price: £9.99 Average Customer Rating: | | "e", The Story of a Number ISBN-10: 0691058547 Brief History of Infinity: The Quest to Think the Unthinkable ISBN-10: 1841196509 An Imaginary Tale: The Story of "i" [the square root of minus one]: The Story of "I" (the Square Root of Minus One) ISBN-10: 0691127980 A History of Pi ISBN-10: 0312381859 Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics ISBN-10: 0452285259 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles Seife (ISBN-10: 0285635948, ISBN-13: 9780285635944). At this time we have not yet written a review for Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles Seife (ISBN-10: 0285635948, ISBN-13: 9780285635944). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Zero and infinity | Customer Rating: | Babylonians invented it, Indians worshipped it, Greeks abhorred it. Zero has been a problematic number for a long time. European mathematicians followed Greek footsteps, until they finally realized how important thing zero was for advanced mathematics.
Seife presents us the history of zero and its sister concept infinity, not only in mathematics, but also in physics and quantum mechanics. Zero is an entertaining book, if a bit light. For quick popular science entertainment purposes it's a good choice. (Review based on the Finnish translation.) | one of the best maths books around | Customer Rating: | | Being an undergraduate philosopher I've had to read a lot of maths books, and this is by far the best. It's true that you don't need much maths background to understand it, but it's also highly enjoyable for those with a lot of maths or physics knowledge - it links up and explains general assumptions in a way which seems never to occur to most teachers of sciences courses. The proof of 0=1 (and, extrapolating, that winston churchill = a carrot) is excellent and well worth committing to memory just to freak out any maths nerds one knows. Also worth a go is the step-by-step guide to making your own wormhole time machine (Step 1: Make a small wormhole, and attach one end to something really heavy). Really excellent, buy everyone you know a copy for christmas. | Mathematics history | Customer Rating: | A very readable book. This book covers the life story of the number zero, and it is a facinating story which is being told.
You do not need to have a better than average understanding of maths to be able to appreciate this book.
A good read, highly recommended. | Review for Zero:the Biography of a Dangerous Idea | Customer Rating: | | This book was absolutely wonderful, it delves into the history of mathematics, as far back as the creation of numbers themselves. It looks at the contribution that the Greeks, Babylonians and Hindus made to mathematics, and how religion had restricted the development of mathematics. The book was written very well, it felt like a story book, rather than a factual book. I recommend this book for everyone with an interest in Maths, you do not need to be a mathematician to enjoy this book. | Highly Recommended | Customer Rating: | | This is an excellent history of number Zero. Charles Seife takes you from the start, tracing the ideas of zero and inifity through time and how their concepts have been feared and embraced, how they've affected and forced evolution upon religious, philosophical, societal, and scientific ideas. I think this book should be part of any mathematics course. Highly recommend this book! |
|