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Who Gave You the Epsilon?
Anderson, Marlow; Katz, Victor J.; Wilson, Robin J.
€ 95.25
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Description for Who Gave You the Epsilon?
Hardcover. Follows on from Sherlock Holmes in Babylon to take the history of mathematics through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Series: Spectrum. Num Pages: 439 pages, Illustrations, ports. BIC Classification: PBX. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 197 x 274 x 28. Weight in Grams: 1060.
This book picks up the history of mathematics from where Sherlock Holmes in Babylon left it. The 40 articles of Who Gave You the Epsilon? continue the story of the development of mathematics into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The articles have all been published in the Mathematical Association of America journals and are in many cases written by distinguished mathematicians such as G. H. Hardy and B. van der Waerden. The articles are arranged thematically to show the development of analysis, geometry, algebra and number theory through this period of time. Each chapter is preceded by a foreword, giving the historical background and setting and the scene, and is followed by an afterword, reporting on advances in our historical knowledge and understanding since the articles first appeared. This book is ideal for anyone wanting to explore the history of mathematics.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2009
Publisher
Mathematical Association of America United States
Number of pages
442
Condition
New
Series
Spectrum
Number of Pages
439
Place of Publication
Washington, United States
ISBN
9780883855690
SKU
V9780883855690
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Anderson, Marlow; Katz, Victor J.; Wilson, Robin J.
After earning his Ph.D. in 1977, Marlow Anderson taught at Indiana-Purdue University in Fort Wayne before coming to Colorado. His graduate work at the University of Kansas was in algebra, specifically lattice ordered groups, and he maintained his interest and research momentum when he joined the department at Colorado College in 1982. Anderson has always had wide ranging interests in mathematics. Logic was an early fascination, geometry was one of the courses he enjoyed designing and teaching, and the history of mathematics became a strong interest. Victor J. Katz, born in Philadelphia, received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Brandeis University in 1968 and was for many years Professor of Mathematics at the University of the District of Columbia. He has long been interested in the history of mathematics and, in particular, in its use in teaching. His well-regarded textbook, A History of Mathematics: An Introduction, is now in its third edition. Its first edition received the Watson Davis Prize of the History of Science Society, a prize awarded annually by the Society for a book in any field of the history of science suitable for undergraduates. Robin Wilson is Professor of Pure Mathematics at the Open University (UK), a Fellow in Mathematics at Keble College, Oxford University, and Emeritus Gresham Professor of Geometry, London (the oldest mathematical Chair in England). He has written and edited about thirty books, mainly on graph theory and the history of mathematics. His research interests focus mainly on British mathematics, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries, and on the history of graph theory and combinatorics.
Reviews for Who Gave You the Epsilon?
As a collection of interesting articles on the history of 19th- and 20th-century mathematics, the present volume is hard to beat. The 41 papers, covering many diverse areas, not just calculus, are mostly accessible to undergraduate mathematics majors, yet their professors will also likely enjoy them and learn quite a bit as well. Highly Recommended."" - C. Bauer, Choice ""The present volume is a sequel to Sherlock Holmes in Babylon and other tales of mathematical history, MAA Spectrum, Math Assoc. America, Washington, DC, 2004. The earlier book treated the period before 1800, while this book describes developments in the 19th and 20th centuries. It is an anthology of over 40 papers previously published in journals of the Mathematical Association of America, the majority in the American Mathematical Monthly, about a third in Mathematics Magazine and two in the College Mathematics Journal. Except for seven Monthly papers from the years 1900 (2), 1913, 1920, 1934, 1937, and 1951, all the papers appeared between 1972 and 2000 inclusive. Many of the authors are respected historians of mathematics. Each of the four chapters is bracketed by a Foreword that gets forth the themes and an Afterward that provides a guide for further reading. There is a good mixture of material that focuses on mathematical developments and that treats the personalities and sociology of the mathematical community. For some topics, the treatment is quite detailed. In such a collection as this, the choice of topics is of necessity unbalanced; the papers are sorted into three chapters under the broad themes of analysis, geometry and axiomatics, and algebra and number theory. The final chapter includes three papers that survey the state of mathematics at the beginning, the midpoint and the end of the 20th century. This collection can be read with profit and enjoyment by both professional mathematicians and undergraduate students specializing in mathematics."" - E.J. Barbeau, Mathematical Reviews