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Magnificent Mistakes in Mathematics

Autor Alfred S. Posamentier, Ignmar Lehmann, Ingmar Lehmann
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 aug 2013
Requiring no more than high-school-level math competency, this playful excursion through the nuances of math will give you a better grasp of this fundamental, all-important science. Veteran math educators demonstrate how some "magnificent mistakes" had profound consequences for our understanding of mathematics' key concepts. In the nineteenth century, English mathematician William Shanks spent fifteen years calculating the value of pi, setting a record for the number of decimal places. Later, his calculation was reproduced using large wooden numerals to decorate the cupola of a hall in the Palais de la Découverte in Paris. However, in 1946, with the aid of a mechanical desk calculator that ran for seventy hours, it was discovered that there was a mistake in the 528th decimal place. Today, supercomputers have determined the value of pi to trillions of decimal places. This is just one of the amusing and intriguing stories about mistakes in mathematics in this layperson's guide to mathematical principles. In another example, the authors show that when we "prove" that every triangle is isosceles, we are violating a concept not even known to Euclid-that of "betweenness." And if we disregard the time-honored Pythagorean theorem, this is a misuse of the concept of infinity. Even using correct procedures can sometimes lead to absurd-but enlightening-results.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781616147471
ISBN-10: 1616147474
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 159 x 236 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Prometheus Books

Notă biografică

Alfred S. Posamentier is dean of the School of Education and professor of mathematics education at Mercy College in Dobbs Ferry, New York. Previously, he had the same positions at the City College of the City University of New York for forty years.  He has published over fifty-five books in the area of mathematics and mathematics education, including The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers (with Ingmar Lehmann). 
 
Ingmar Lehmann is retired from the mathematics faculty at Humboldt University in Berlin. For many years he led the Berlin Mathematics Student Society for gifted secondary-school students, with which he is still closely engaged today.  He is the coauthor with Alfred S. Posamentier of The Secrets of TrianglesThe Glorious Golden Ratio, and three other books.

Recenzii

“People who like math, as well as those who struggled with it for years, will be captivated by this book. The authors ask readers to follow them into mathematical areas such as the number pi, the Pythagorean theorem, or other concepts and look for ‘magnificent mistakes,’ and they show most interestingly that ‘even using correct procedures can sometimes lead to absurd—but enlightening—results.’ It’s a brilliant and entertaining technique for understanding math and the development of theorems. Following [Posamentier and Lehmann's] popular books on the Fibonacci numbers and pi, this is another fascinating and enjoyable read.”
—Dr. Gerhard Ackermann, professor and retired president, Beuth University of Applied Sciences, Berlin 

"A fascinating journey through the history of mathematics, highlighting the great thinkers of all time, from Pythagoras, Aristotle, and Archimedes, through the inventors of calculus, Newton and Leibniz. The authors identify the mistakes of these and other notable mathematicians, and, in a gentle and lighthearted way, lead the reader through an easy-to-follow explanation of the error and the appropriate correction. This book is both informative and entertaining and should make every mathematician, both novice and professional, feel secure with the knowledge that their errors put them in the company of the greatest mathematicians of all time.... A treasure for educators, mathematicians, and those with an interest in mathematics and its history.”
—Daniel Jaye, chief academic officer and director of Academic Affairs, Solomon Schechter Day School of Bergen County