Difference between revisions of "The Story of Mathematics"

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'''''The Story of Mathematics''''' is a book about the history of [[mathematics]] written by [[Anne Rooney]] and published in 2008. It is part of Rooney's [[Story Of (universe)|''Story Of'' series]].
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'''''The Story of Mathematics''''' is a book about the history of [[mathematics]] written by [[Anne Rooney]] and published in 2008. It is part of Rooney's [[The Story Of (universe)|''The Story Of'' series]].
  
 
==Personal==
 
==Personal==

Revision as of 14:01, 22 March 2023

The Story of Mathematics

Story of Mathematics, The - Paperback - USA - 1st Edition.jpg

Paperback - USA - 1st edition.

Author Anne Rooney
Published 2008-??-??
Type Non-fiction
Genre Educational
Themes History, Mathematics
Age Group Adult

The Story of Mathematics is a book about the history of mathematics written by Anne Rooney and published in 2008. It is part of Rooney's The Story Of series.

Personal

Personal

Own?Paperback - USA - 1st edition.
Read?Paperback - USA - 1st edition.
Finished201?.

I own a paperback. I probably bought it in the discount section of a book store around 2012. I read it shortly after buying it and liked it. Wanting to create a page for it in this Wiki, I reread.

Review

Overall:

Rating-7.svg

Good

  • Despite being about mathematics, the book is very easy to follow. It's fully illustrated and written for the average reader.
  • The first chapter is a great introduction into teaching how numbers are a something humans had to invent rather than concepts that just exist on their own. It starts with pre-numeric systems like tick marks, then moves onto various early counting systems like Roman Numerals and the Chinese multiplicative system, then discusses the various and base-5, 12 and 60 systems used by ancient cultures before finally getting to the Hindu-Arabic system we use today. It also describes early versions of zero before it became a true placeholder, negative numbers, and fractions.
  • I like how it discusses how early cultures don't have words for big numbers, and, when they do, they're cumbersome.

Bad

  • The magazine layout with lots of sidebars makes it difficult to stay focused on the main thread.

Ugly

  • Nothing.

Links

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