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The Zen of Magic Squares, Circles, and Stars: An Exhibition of Surprising Structures across Dimensions
 
 

The Zen of Magic Squares, Circles, and Stars: An Exhibition of Surprising Structures across Dimensions [Paperback]

Clifford A. Pickover
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Review

A perpetual idea machine, Clifford Pickover is one of the most creative, original thinkers in the world today. -- "Journal of Recreational Mathematics

Pickover just seems to exist in more dimensions than the rest of us. -- Ian Stewart, Scientific American

Clifford Pickover is many things--scientist, scholar, author, editor, and visionary. . . . -- "Games

It is a safe bet to conjecture that this is the best recreational mathematics book that will be published in this year. . . . Pickover writes with his usual style and straightforward simplicity in this book. The material is presented well and can be understood by anyone with a basic middle school mathematics background. This is a cool book! -- Charles Ashbacker, Journal of Recreational Mathematics

Through accessible and readable prose and through detailed, highquality line illustrations, Pickover ably transports the general reader from culturally embedded traditional topics to a new and surprising frontier. -- Harold Don Allen, Mathematics Teacher

Pickover writes about his subject with contagious enthusiasm and comprehensive erudition. -- "Choice

A splendid recreational book. . . . An extremely alluring page-turner. -- Andrew Bremner, Notices of the American Mathematical Society

Book Description

Humanity's love affair with mathematics and mysticism reached a critical juncture, legend has it, on the back of a turtle in ancient China. As Clifford Pickover briefly recounts in this enthralling book, the most comprehensive in decades on magic squares, Emperor Yu was supposedly strolling along the Yellow River one day around 2200 B.C. when he spotted the creature: its shell had a series of dots within squares. To Yu's amazement, each row of squares contained fifteen dots, as did the columns and diagonals. When he added any two cells opposite along a line through the center square, like 2 and 8, he always arrived at 10. The turtle, unwitting inspirer of the ''Yu'' square, went on to a life of courtly comfort and fame.

Pickover explains why Chinese emperors, Babylonian astrologer-priests, prehistoric cave people in France, and ancient Mayans of the Yucatan were convinced that magic squares--arrays filled with numbers or letters in certain arrangements--held the secret of the universe. Since the dawn of civilization, he writes, humans have invoked such patterns to ward off evil and bring good fortune. Yet who would have guessed that in the twenty-first century, mathematicians would be studying magic squares so immense and in so many dimensions that the objects defy ordinary human contemplation and visualization?

Readers are treated to a colorful history of magic squares and similar structures, their construction, and classification along with a remarkable variety of newly discovered objects ranging from ornate inlaid magic cubes to hypercubes. Illustrated examples occur throughout, with some patterns from the author's own experiments. The tesseracts, circles, spheres, and stars that he presents perfectly convey the age-old devotion of the math-minded to this Zenlike quest. Number lovers, puzzle aficionados, and math enthusiasts will treasure this rich and lively encyclopedia of one of the few areas of mathematics where the contributions of even nonspecialists count.


Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
1. Start by placing 1 in the center cell, top row. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars No Math, but pretty anyway, Jan 9 2004
This is a book about mathematical artifacts, but it has practically no mathematical content of its own. A casual reader who wants to gaze at these beautiful objects and come away impressed but with little understanding will find this a marvellous book. However, a mathematically inclined reader is not satisfied with someone declaring that an object has such-and-such a property, he wants to know WHY.

Chapter 1 of this book gives dozens of fascinating constructions, but for most of them not a shred of proof is offered that the arrays produced are the magic squares Pickover claims. It leaves me wondering whether or not Pickover could produce such proofs himself, even for the more simple constructions in the book.

Pickover describes some interesting computer experiments at the end of the chapter but seems completely stymied as to why they work. The demonstration is a lovely, but simple, piece of matrix theory that I would expect my first or second year Linear Algebra students to be able to perform.
He shows two "brute-force" proofs for the order 3 case, one by Hendricks and "another" by Johnson (at least here is an attempt at including a proof), but annoyingly seems unaware that the second is just a minor variation on the first. I wonder if Pickover actually tried to follow these proofs himself or if he just copied them for his book.

Mathematics is not a collection of statements that the hearer must accept on "authority", it is a systematic development of theory in which every statement can be, at least in principle, demonstrated by a logical argument. The mathematics is in understanding "why", not in the acceptance of fact. Without demonstration of the claims, all that is left is the shell with no life. Beautiful, like other shells we find along the shore, but not the genuine article itself.

I am reminded somewhat of Stephen Hawking's popularizations of physics in which the reader is deeply impressed with the beauty of the subject, but comes away knowing practically no actual physics to speak of, for the author carefully seals the machinery of physics from his reader and presents only the glamorous face. In the case of Hawking, however, the author's authority is unquestionable; I'm sure he could, if pressed, demonstrate every claim in his books from first principles. I suspect that Pickover could not.

Aside from a few excusable errors of fact, the book shares a serious omission with almost every book on magic squares that I have seen, in that it does not present what is surely the most elementary construction known for magic squares of any odd order, as the sum of a circulant and a back-circulant matrix. Even Pickover would be able to prove that this construction works, since the reason it works is extremely obvious. Given the connection of this construction to the very important subject of orthogonal Latin Squares, you would think a serious writer would devote some space to it.

Aside from all of the above, the material in the book is comprehensive and fascinating, drawing on a number of sources, displaying many artifacts that have titillated dabblers for millennia. As a museum piece I'd have to give the book an "A", but as a piece of mathematics, only a "D".

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5.0 out of 5 stars What fun!, Dec 29 2002
By 
"kmwwrench" (Minnesota, United States) - See all my reviews
OK, there were a couple of typos -- keeps you on your toes. Lots and lots of examples of different variations on the magic square theme -- and puzzles for the reader to solve. Some of those puzzles are quite easy and some are quite difficult and have yet to be solved by anyone. You can't be a mathphobe to read this book, but you don't need to be a math whiz either. Anybody who likes the challenge of a good crossword or crossnumber puzzle should like this.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Diverse collection, Sep 25 2002
By 
sharon (Portland, Oregon) - See all my reviews
A magic square is an array of numbers in which the sums of numbers in rows, columns, and diagonals are equal. A magic square uses consecutive numbers from 1 to N. Here's an example,

4 9 2
3 5 7
8 1 6

This book is different from all others I've seen on the subject, and I don't know any other books that present the large range of patterns that you'll find here. The book also focuses on discoveries in the last few years. As Pickover says, the book is essentially an exhibit of magnificent forms discovered through the centuries. All sorts of historical and quirky-human aspects are also described. Centuries ago, people believed that magic squares to had special, magical powers....
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