The Calculus Story: A Mathematical Adventure
Autor David Achesonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 noi 2017
Preț: 88.82 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 133
Preț estimativ în valută:
16.100€ • 17.98$ • 14.18£
16.100€ • 17.98$ • 14.18£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 07-21 decembrie
Livrare express 23-29 noiembrie pentru 22.30 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198804543
ISBN-10: 0198804547
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 115 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 168 x 208 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198804547
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 115 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 168 x 208 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
A masterpiece... Packed with insights, both historical and mathematical.
This is the book on calculus I wish I'd written. It's a beautifully simple, friendly guide that's bursting at the seams with glorious, persuasive explanations as to why calculus is one of the most powerful ideas ever conceived by mankind.
A splendid little book ... accessible to a very wide audience ... The book is highly recommended.
A remarkably expansive and frictionless tour of mathematical history and theory... The calculus story is no textbook... It is the antithesis of the dreary way calculus is too often taught at schools and universities... a supplement for a high school student, the parents of such a student, or an adult wishing to reacquaint herself painlessly with material long forgotten.
This is a very readable book... It offers an illuminating perspective on calculus... A very enjoyable book for the layperson or the user of calculus.
Wish I'd had it as a maths student!
Another wonderful book.
A very clear explanation of calculus ([I] wish I'd had it as a maths student!) along with some history of the subject.
Superb introduction to calculus that should be in every young mathematician's bookcase.
Don't panic if your mathematical muscles appear to have withered away (or you never truly cracked differentiation), David Acheson's The Calculus Story could be just the thing... A roller-coaster read, constantly climbing and diving through the wonderful world of calculus... There's something for everyone, from the inexperienced integrator to the seasoned solver of equations... His enthusiasm for calculus is almost palpable.
Dazzling.
I would have killed for this book when I was 13 ... he [David Acheson] belongs in the league of great authors of popular works on mathematics.
A worthy successor to 1089 and All That.
A simple guide to calculus - where it came from, how it works, what it's good for, and where it went. Brief, informative, charming, and a model of clarity. Ideal motivation for beginners, and recommended to anyone who wonders what the subject is about.
This wide-ranging picture of calculus and its applications, from antiquity to the present, reveals the method as both the key to much of modern science and engineering, and something of a mathematical adventure.
Acheson offers a much-needed short account of the big picture of calculus as a whole, illustrated with examples and reproductions from historic publications [...] Short pages, many illustrations, and a sense of telling a big story contribute to the success of the book.
This is the book on calculus I wish I'd written. It's a beautifully simple, friendly guide that's bursting at the seams with glorious, persuasive explanations as to why calculus is one of the most powerful ideas ever conceived by mankind.
A splendid little book ... accessible to a very wide audience ... The book is highly recommended.
A remarkably expansive and frictionless tour of mathematical history and theory... The calculus story is no textbook... It is the antithesis of the dreary way calculus is too often taught at schools and universities... a supplement for a high school student, the parents of such a student, or an adult wishing to reacquaint herself painlessly with material long forgotten.
This is a very readable book... It offers an illuminating perspective on calculus... A very enjoyable book for the layperson or the user of calculus.
Wish I'd had it as a maths student!
Another wonderful book.
A very clear explanation of calculus ([I] wish I'd had it as a maths student!) along with some history of the subject.
Superb introduction to calculus that should be in every young mathematician's bookcase.
Don't panic if your mathematical muscles appear to have withered away (or you never truly cracked differentiation), David Acheson's The Calculus Story could be just the thing... A roller-coaster read, constantly climbing and diving through the wonderful world of calculus... There's something for everyone, from the inexperienced integrator to the seasoned solver of equations... His enthusiasm for calculus is almost palpable.
Dazzling.
I would have killed for this book when I was 13 ... he [David Acheson] belongs in the league of great authors of popular works on mathematics.
A worthy successor to 1089 and All That.
A simple guide to calculus - where it came from, how it works, what it's good for, and where it went. Brief, informative, charming, and a model of clarity. Ideal motivation for beginners, and recommended to anyone who wonders what the subject is about.
This wide-ranging picture of calculus and its applications, from antiquity to the present, reveals the method as both the key to much of modern science and engineering, and something of a mathematical adventure.
Acheson offers a much-needed short account of the big picture of calculus as a whole, illustrated with examples and reproductions from historic publications [...] Short pages, many illustrations, and a sense of telling a big story contribute to the success of the book.
Notă biografică
David Acheson is a British applied mathematician, best known for his popular maths book 1089 and All That (OUP, 2010), which has been translated into 11 languages. He is an Emeritus Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford, and was Oxford University's first winner of a National Teaching Fellowship, in 2004. He was President of the Mathematical Association for 2010-11, and now lectures widely on mathematics to young people and the general public. In 2013, David Acheson was awarded an Honorary D.Sc by the University of East Anglia for his outstanding work in the popularisation of mathematics.