Revised and updated to take into account dramatic developments of the 1980s and 1990s, "Mathematics: The New Golden Age" includes, in addition to Fermat's Last Theorem, major new sections on knots and topology, and the mathematics of the physical universe.
Devlin portrays mathematics not as a collection of procedures for solving problems, but as a unified part of human culture, as part of mankind's eternal quest to understand ourselves and the world in which we live. Though a genuine science, mathematics has strong artistic elements as well; this creativity is in evidence here as Devlin shows what mathematicians do -- and reveals that it has little to do with numbers and arithmetic. This book brilliantly captures the fascinating new age of mathematics.
| p d eastman g a bollinger n dunstone rajesh bheda leveque leveque | leen frisch henry cholmondeley pennell jasper salwey timothy m dolan r g k |