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Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics
 
 

Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics [Hardcover]

John C. Stillwell

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 244 pages
  • Publisher: A K Peters/CRC Press; 1 edition (May 23 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 156881254X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1568812540
  • Product Dimensions: 23.1 x 15.5 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 499 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #551,784 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Like the White Queen in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, mathematicians are called upon to believe in things that, at first glance, defy common sense and appear impossible. . . . As Stillwell puts it, 'Mathematics is a story of close encounters with the impossible because all its great discoveries are close to the impossible.'
—Ivars Peterson, Science News , July 2006

Stillwell weaves historical details into his writing seamlessly, helping to give the reader the true feeling that mathematics is more than just a bunch of people playing games with symbols, but rather a rich and rewarding intellectual endeavor important to the human enterprise.
—Marcus E. Barnes, MAA Reviews, August 2006

Yearning for the Impossible is as much of a celebration of the greater understanding mathematics has brought to the world as it is a history and discussion of innovative concepts. and is highly recommended for library and personal reading shelves.
—Wisconsin Bookwatch, August 2006

Rises nobly to the challenge of describing these topics to a genuine novice...There is much to admire in Stillwell's attempt... he's accomplishing something very important and difficult here in demonstrating that there's some real struggle present in the process of mathematical discovery.
—Daniel Biss, Notices, June 2007

Yearning for the Impossible offers a fascinating, historical look at some popular mathematical concepts used in music, art and philosophy. . . This book is an interesting find and provides a readable approach to some higher-level mathematics. The chapters can be read independently, and the reader can dig deeper into textbooks and history books for additional problems and details. I give a high recommendation for this book!
—Lynn Godshall, Convergence Magazine (MAA), June 2007

A wonderful journey through mathematical discoveries... this book is an excellent vehicle for giving mathematics students new research ideas and, most important, for planting the seed in their minds to 'yearn for the impossible' as they investigate new truths.
Mathematics Teacher, August 2007

Stillwell has achieved what many might well have come to believe to be nearly impossible in mathematical exposition for the masses...[he] succeeds, in every topic treated, in bringing a fresh eye to questions even mathematicians might think have been mined in the past to boring exhaustion [and] shows there is still a lot of gold to be found, if one only thinks about things in a new way. Stillwell brings new, unorthodox insights to his writing that will stimulate readers (from high schoolers to emeritus professors) to think about old topics in new, nonstale ways... Yearning for the Impossible will be a treat for teachers, too, who are looking for new ways to bring stimulating, fresh examples into their courses.
SIAM Review, May 2007

Stillwell does an excellent job laying the historical foundations for these discoveries; he is to be commended for his historical accuracy.
—Recreational Math, March 2007

Mathematics may be described as a story of close encounters with the impossible because all great discoveries are close to the impossible. The aim of this book is to tell this story, briefly and with few prerequisites, by presenting some representative encounters across the breadth of mathematics.
CMS Notes, May 2007

This book explores history through a lens focused on the creative tension between common sense and the 'impossible' . . . Drawing connections to art, literature, philosophy, and physics, this book examines the place of mathematics in our intellectual landscape.
L'Enseignement Mathématique, January 2006

2009 Alpha Sigma Nu Book Award in the Discipline of Mathematics/Computer Science
—The Association of Jesuit Colleges & Universities, November 2009

Product Description

This book explores the history of mathematics from the perspective of the creative tension between common sense and the "impossible" as the author follows the discovery or invention of new concepts that have marked mathematical progress: - Irrational and Imaginary Numbers - The Fourth Dimension - Curved Space - Infinity and others The author puts these creations into a broader context involving related "impossibilities" from art, literature, philosophy, and physics. By imbedding mathematics into a broader cultural context and through his clever and enthusiastic explication of mathematical ideas the author broadens the horizon of students beyond the narrow confines of rote memorization and engages those who are curious about the place of mathematics in our intellectual landscape.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)

30 of 30 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Many of the mathematical ideas once considered impossible, Oct 15 2007
By Charles Ashbacher - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics (Hardcover)
There are many great ideas in mathematics and what makes them unique is that many of them were considered impossible for a long period of time. In this book, Stillwell presents many of those ideas using an expository style that is both understandable and complete. The chapters are:

*) The Irrational - where the discovery of irrational numbers and how it shocked the Pythagoreans is explained. It forever destroyed the idea that everything could be completely expressed using only the integers. This discovery also made it clear that some things would forever remain unknown.
*) The Imaginary - this section describes the development of the "imaginary" numbers, where the impossible task of taking the square root of a negative number became routine.
*) The Horizon - where converging parallel lines allowed artists to perform what was considered impossible, give two-dimensional paintings a three-dimensional perspective.
*) The Infinitesimal - where splitting a figure into extremely small sections made it possible to easily solve an enormous number of complex problems.
*) Curved space - where the natural world of Euclid was suddenly overturned by the creation of curved worlds that are even more natural.
*) The Fourth Dimension - where the impossibility of structures having more than three dimensions is proven false. Along the way, imaginary numbers are made even more so by the development of the quaternions.
*) The Ideal - in this case, the impossibility of numbers having more than one fundamental factorization is overturned only to be partially restored.
*) Periodic Space - among others, M. C. Escher demonstrated that it is easy to place impossible objects on a canvas.
*) The Infinite - where it is demonstrated that not all infinities are alike, it is the case that some infinities have more elements than others.

Stillwell does an excellent job in pointing out that "impossible" is a difficult word to use in mathematics, as it is relative to the definitions of the object being examined. While there is absolute truth in mathematics, something lacking in many other areas of human endeavor, the truth is also often relative to how imaginative we are in our definitions.

Published in Journal of Recreational Mathematics, reprinted with permission

20 of 20 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, July 18 2007
By Mark Shapiro - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics (Hardcover)
This book, which can be viewed as a prequel to Stillwell's "History of mathematics", is an excellent resource for someone who wishes to get a view of mathematics as a field of inquiry driven by the need to solve problems as much as by creative desire to uncover connections between seemingly unrelated ideas by people who made mathematics, such as Gauss, Hamilton, Abel, Euler, Riemann. There are lively short essays about these and other great mathematicians. When read along with regular (good) textbooks on, e.g., complex variables, geometry, the two Stillwell's books will lead to a much better understanding of mathematical ideas.

17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Beyond Common Sense, May 29 2007
By Lewis H. Robinson - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Yearning for the Impossible: The Surprising Truths of Mathematics (Hardcover)
I liked this book. I particularly liked Chapter 1, The Irrational, Chapter 5, Curved Space, and Chapter 6, The Fourth Dimension.

Chapter 7, The Ideal, is also excellent and alone worth the purchase price, albeit the reader needs to follow closely the notational details and diagrams. In fact Chapter 7 is the reason I bought the book in the first place. I had always struggled with this important concept and was pleasantely surprised upon finding a book--Stillwell's--that devoted a whole chapter to the subject at an introductory as well as historical level. The author follows the development of the notion of the ideal concept from Gauss, to Kummer, to Dedekind's final generalization, where the payoff comes in Section 7.8. "Ideals, or Unique Prime Factorization Regained".
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 9 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 

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