<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="65001"%> Professor Stewart’s Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities
    TRADE & GENERAL ART & DESIGN ACADEMIC CHILDREN'S TITLE SCHOOL SEARCH CONTACT US
             
HOME
NEW TITLES
THE ECONOMIST
PROFILE BOOKS
SERPENT'S TAIL
ASIA INTEREST
BUSINESS & SELF HELP
CRAFTS
DICTIONARIES
FICTION
FOOD & DRINK
GARDENING
GIFTS & HUMOUR
HOBBIES
LOCAL INTEREST
MAPS
MBS & HEALTH
NATURAL HISTORY
OTHERS
PARENTING
PETS CARE
SPORTS
TRAVEL


ISBN 9781846683459
Publisher: Profile Books
Paperback: 320 pages
Pub Date: Jul 2010

£8.99

Professor Stewart’s Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities
Ian Stewart


A book of mathematical oddities: games, puzzles, facts, numbers and delightful mathematical nibbles for the curious and adventurous mind.

School maths is not the interesting part. The real fun is elsewhere. Like a magpie, Ian Stewart has collected the most enlightening, entertaining and vexing ‘curiosities’ of maths over the years…Now, the private collection is displayed in his cabinet.

There are some hidden gems of logic, geometry and probability – like how to extract a cherry from a cocktail glass (harder than you think), a pop up dodecahedron, the real reason why you can’t divide anything by zero and some tips for making money by proving the obvious. Scattered among these are keys to unlocking the mysteries of Fermat’s last theorem, the Poincaré Conjecture, chaos theory, and the P/NP problem for which a million dollar prize is on offer. There are beguiling secrets about familiar names like Pythagoras or prime numbers, as well as anecdotes about great mathematicians. Pull out the drawers of the Professor’s cabinet and who knows what could happen…