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Learn about the most important mathematical ideas, theorems, and movements in The Math Book. Part of the fascinating Big Ideas series, this book tackles tricky topics and themes in a simple and easy to follow format. Learn about Math in this overview guide to the subject, brilliant for novices looking to find out more and experts wishing to refresh their knowledge alike! The Math Book brings a fresh and vibrant take on the topic through eye-catching graphics and diagrams to immerse yourself in. This captivating book will broaden your understanding of Math, with: - More than 85 ideas and events key to the development of mathematics - Packed with facts, charts, timelines and graphs to help explain core concepts - A visual approach to big subjects with striking illustrations and graphics throughout - Easy to follow text makes topics accessible for people at any level of understanding The Math Book is a captivating introduction to the world’s most famous theorems, mathematicians and movements, aimed at adults with an interest in the subject and students wanting to gain more of an overview. Charting the development of math around the world from Babylon to Bletchley Park, this book explains how math help us understand everything from patterns in nature to artificial intelligence. Your Math Questions, Simply Explained What is an imaginary number? Can two parallel lines ever meet? How can math help us predict the future? This engaging overview explores answers to big questions like these and how they contribute to our understanding of math. If you thought it was difficult to learn about topics like algebra and statistics, The Math Book presents key information in an easy to follow layout. Learn about the history of math, from ancient ideas such as magic squares and the abacus to modern cryptography, fractals, and the final proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem. The Big Ideas Series With millions of copies sold worldwide, The Math Book is part of the award-winning Big Ideas series from DK. The series uses striking graphics along with engaging writing, making big topics easy to understand. Review: The Math book adds up - Really fun read with outstanding info boxes and graphics. My best hope is that people who love math and get teased about it give it to the nay sayers. Math is fascinating and relevant, and this book proves both. Review: Did not expect... - I really did not expect that I could understand and so much enjoy this book. This, because I have no formal education in mathematics. On the other hand, I have an informal self-education and, above all, a positive life-long attitude towards mathematics as the basis of science and tecnology. And, a recent experience of three excellent DK-books in Philosophy, Politics and Economics. No difficulty of understanding, but mathematics is, however, mathematics, something above the common sense of the man of the street. But it soon turned out that my education was enough and allowed me to understand everything presented in this book. Not due so much to myself, but to the tradition of the DK-Books and the authhors of this particular book, a completely fantastic experience. Not just a dry sequence of definitions and formulas, but succulent and colourful story behind every concept. When I say story it means really the history up to the person, his education, working, family and frienship background. Own chapter is devoted to all important subjects with specific references as sources before and applications after the appearance of the subject matter. Never seen that kind of presentation outside the DK-books. Nor the systematic internal linkage of all persons and subjects in the text, say at least average of three on every page making up to at least three thousand alltogether. Take or leave, in general leave, of courss. But this very linkage is an indication of the importance of the aubject. Such mames as Gauss, Newton, Kepler etc. appear tens of times as links leading to their lifework. There is, of course, the usual appendices of indexes of persons and subjects at the end of the book. Because of the thorough internal linkage the importance of these indices is reduced. In these do I find the only object for my crititicism. The contents of both these indices seems to be random and ungrounded. The persons are either completely unknown in the text or already better specified in the text, the most important ones. In the subject index I pay notice that differential and differential equation are included, but not difference and difference equations. Now I reveal the result of my private extra mathematical education: as economics professor, the latter two have been for me more important than the former. I have for fwenty years given lectures in the medium level mathematical economics, with special interes on the structure and equilibrium of econometric macromodel, that is a group of difference equations. Anyway, full, overfull five stars as a general assessment of this DK-book, agenre of its own. @@@














































| Best Sellers Rank | #55,081 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #6 in Number Theory (Books) #14 in Mathematics Reference (Books) #23 in Mathematics History |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,489 Reviews |
M**N
The Math book adds up
Really fun read with outstanding info boxes and graphics. My best hope is that people who love math and get teased about it give it to the nay sayers. Math is fascinating and relevant, and this book proves both.
A**A
Did not expect...
I really did not expect that I could understand and so much enjoy this book. This, because I have no formal education in mathematics. On the other hand, I have an informal self-education and, above all, a positive life-long attitude towards mathematics as the basis of science and tecnology. And, a recent experience of three excellent DK-books in Philosophy, Politics and Economics. No difficulty of understanding, but mathematics is, however, mathematics, something above the common sense of the man of the street. But it soon turned out that my education was enough and allowed me to understand everything presented in this book. Not due so much to myself, but to the tradition of the DK-Books and the authhors of this particular book, a completely fantastic experience. Not just a dry sequence of definitions and formulas, but succulent and colourful story behind every concept. When I say story it means really the history up to the person, his education, working, family and frienship background. Own chapter is devoted to all important subjects with specific references as sources before and applications after the appearance of the subject matter. Never seen that kind of presentation outside the DK-books. Nor the systematic internal linkage of all persons and subjects in the text, say at least average of three on every page making up to at least three thousand alltogether. Take or leave, in general leave, of courss. But this very linkage is an indication of the importance of the aubject. Such mames as Gauss, Newton, Kepler etc. appear tens of times as links leading to their lifework. There is, of course, the usual appendices of indexes of persons and subjects at the end of the book. Because of the thorough internal linkage the importance of these indices is reduced. In these do I find the only object for my crititicism. The contents of both these indices seems to be random and ungrounded. The persons are either completely unknown in the text or already better specified in the text, the most important ones. In the subject index I pay notice that differential and differential equation are included, but not difference and difference equations. Now I reveal the result of my private extra mathematical education: as economics professor, the latter two have been for me more important than the former. I have for fwenty years given lectures in the medium level mathematical economics, with special interes on the structure and equilibrium of econometric macromodel, that is a group of difference equations. Anyway, full, overfull five stars as a general assessment of this DK-book, agenre of its own. @@@
P**L
Knowledge of Math compacted at an affordable price !
The book was in very good condition for a second hand book. Such a small price for such a vast subject!
A**R
Still great content but book construction quality is really low. No dust jacket.
CONTENT REVIEW UPDATE!!! So I've had a couple of days to read a few chapters and I have to say that the content is just great! I love both math and philosophy and this book certainly takes a walk on that very journey of discovery! It has fascinating histories throughout the book as well as graphics to represent concepts (like why positive numbers have two square roots, or how doubling quickly increases exponentially). This is certainly a cornerstone of these books and "The Math Book" certainly keeps delivering in this aspect. Of the chapters I've read, I feel like the contributors do a good job of providing historical facts and references along with contrasting ideas at the time (if any of relevance appear). The chapters feel balanced this way. I also really appreciated reading about how a new discovery was perceived by the peoples of its time which was not often in a positive manner. The contents of this book are really great and although the construction leaves MUCH to be desired, I feel like the contents are still an amazing addition to this series. I've updated the review score and taken away 1 star due to the obviously poor construction. I feel like 3 stars is too low because people that like Math would enjoy this book even in tatters, on the other hand 4 stars feels too high to support such an unexpected quality dip (in construction, not contents). Finally I settled on 4 stars because I feel the content is amazing. 3.5 is where I would have voted. I want you to be aware of the construction quality but also know that if you do decide to purchase this, that the contents will still be amazing and although it may fall apart over time, if you can find some glue to keep it together you'll still enjoy each chapter as the small history/math/philosophy lesson that it brings. THE REST OF THIS REVIEW is not about the contents but instead it is about the quality of construction. I've been a buyer of this series since the beginning and the quality has always been superb. At least the last two volumes ("Ecology Book" and "The Feminism Book") have shown a reduction in paper thickness. Considering that these books tend to stay right at 352 pages, it is easy to tell the difference. - The first quality dip is the lack of a dust jacket. Yes this is purely cosmetic but all the other books have one and this is the first volume that came without it. As a pre-order customer, it was unexpected and disappointing. - The second is the hard cover itself. All previous books have a glossy finish and this is the first one that is matte. Yes, this is also purely cosmetic but it just keeps the quality low. Yet another visual difference when compared to all previous books. - Third, the binding, I'm actually concerned for the longevity of this book. Please follow along with the pictures. The Math book (black cover) is compared to The Psychology book (red cover). --First picture shows the signatures (that's those little books made up of typically 8 pages) are quite a bit loose, this is most likely due to the fact that the spine itself does not have a tight glue binding but just a glue strip. Please also notice how the book lays when it is opened half way and notice how the spine is bent at almost a right angle. This sharp angle is not good on the life of the spine. --Second picture shows the Psychology book (an early volume in this collection) opened on top of the Math book. Notice the glue visible all along the signatures (right at the spine) and notice how flat the spine is. Yes the book doesn't open as flat but this is great for a long lasting spine. --Third picture shows the thickness of the Math book (left) vs. Psychology book (right). Both 352 pages but very different page thickness. Again, the last couple of volumes have also had their page thickness reduced but at least the spine and binding were still of higher quality. --Fourth picture shows the spines side-by-side --Fifth picture shows the thickness measured. It's hard to tell from the picture but the pages alone (not including the covers) are 3/4" thick for the Math book and 7/8" for the Psychology book (on even denominators: 6/8" vs 7/8") that thickness really matters when pages need to last a long time. --Sixth picture shows the number of pages. The Math book has an Acknowledgment page without the number on the top left but I'm showing the page 350 just behind it, making the page number at 352 while the Psychology book ends right at page 352 as shown. --Seventh picture shows the stitches used in the Psychology book: count 6 stitches!! Nice and tight along the page height. --Eight picture shows the stitches used in the Math book, a bit harder to see but there are only 5 stitches. The page height is the same so this means fewer stitches spread farther out, giving less strength to the binding itself --Ninth and final picture shows the lack of glue from the spine of the Math book (on top) vs a thick glue binding on the Psychology book (bottom). For the price paid for this book, I'd say that the quality change is baffling. I'm certainly hoping that quality resumes in future volumes. PUBLISHER: if you're reading this, when you cut quality so explicitly (and really blatantly), you make a wonderful product into a much cheaper version of itself. THINKING ABOUT COLLECTING THIS SERIES?: beware of construction quality. That's what this review is about. If you like the series, just be aware that not all volumes hold the same construction standards and this book in particular may not last as long as the previous books. A personal disappointment: The low construction quality on this volume was really hurtful. I love these books and I'm so disappointed with the quality of this volume. The contents of these books has always been great, why cheapen the product with such poor materials and construction?
C**N
Mathematical!
Math is used everyday in one form or another, yet its principles are not always appreciated or fully understood. This book offers a great and fulfilling understanding its intricacies.
N**B
It’s a bigger than a normal book
I thought the book would be the same size as a normal book but it’s more like a textbook. Other than that it’s great! Lots of graphs, pictures, and easy to read text. Goes over the history of math and explains the concepts. Most of the stuff in this book you don’t learn in school since most teachers don’t tell you who created various concepts. This book is more historical than math so keep that in mind.
S**T
Wonderful math history book.
I purchased this book for my bright Math loving 8 year old. She loves it, so do I. It is well written and we love how it talks about the history of Math and some famous people of math.
S**A
Excellent book on major mathematical ideas
This is extremely well written and interesting book on mathematics. However, any of the reviewers who say that they understand everything in this book, are either mathematicians, geniuses, or are deceiving themselves. Highly recommended if you are interested in mathematics, or are exceptionally intelligent, or just like to read about mathematics and be baffled and amazed.
A**O
Great
Great product, fast delivery, excellent seller. Highly recommend!
O**A
A good general overview of mathematics.
It's a very informational book to say the least, it doesn't get too deep into its own topics, which makes it a good general overview. If you're interested in mathematics and want to get introduced to it: I'd say this book is a good start.
D**W
Very useful book for students.
The Maths Book is very interesting and informative book. It presents various facts and historical data in simple words. Very useful book for students preparing for competitive exams as well as many other exams. Worth buying.
R**I
Interesting Book
Nice book on Maths.Lot of information, history etc.
U**L
Increíble contenido.
Adoro está línea editorial, y está versión me ha encantado, para iniciar en nociones e historia de las matemáticas.
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