Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Note to the Reader
- NEW MATHEMATICAL LIBRARY
- Contents
- INGENUITY IN MATHEMATICS
- Preface
- Essay 1 Probability and π
- Essay 2 Odd and Even Numbers
- Essay 3 Sylvester's Problem of Collinear Triads
- Essay 4 The Algebra of Statements
- Essay 5 The Farey Series
- Essay 6 A Property of an
- Essay 7 Squaring the Square
- Essay 8 Writing a Number as a Sum of Two Squares
- Essay 9 The Isoperimetric Problem
- Essay 10 Five Curiosities from Arithmetic
- Essay 11 A Problem of Regiomontanus
- Essay 12 Complementary Sequences
- Essay 13 Pythagorean Arithmetic
- Essay 14 Abundant Numbers
- Essay 15 Mascheroni and Steiner
- Essay 16 A Property of Some Repeating Decimals
- Essay 17 The Theorem of Barbier
- Essay 18 The Series of Reciprocals of Primes
- Essay 19 Van Schooten's Problem
- Solutions to Exercises
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
- Frontmatter
- Note to the Reader
- NEW MATHEMATICAL LIBRARY
- Contents
- INGENUITY IN MATHEMATICS
- Preface
- Essay 1 Probability and π
- Essay 2 Odd and Even Numbers
- Essay 3 Sylvester's Problem of Collinear Triads
- Essay 4 The Algebra of Statements
- Essay 5 The Farey Series
- Essay 6 A Property of an
- Essay 7 Squaring the Square
- Essay 8 Writing a Number as a Sum of Two Squares
- Essay 9 The Isoperimetric Problem
- Essay 10 Five Curiosities from Arithmetic
- Essay 11 A Problem of Regiomontanus
- Essay 12 Complementary Sequences
- Essay 13 Pythagorean Arithmetic
- Essay 14 Abundant Numbers
- Essay 15 Mascheroni and Steiner
- Essay 16 A Property of Some Repeating Decimals
- Essay 17 The Theorem of Barbier
- Essay 18 The Series of Reciprocals of Primes
- Essay 19 Van Schooten's Problem
- Solutions to Exercises
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This book contains short, self-contained essays on elementary mathematics. Many describe work of outstanding mathematicians, Gauss among them, and show the incisiveness and ingenuity so characteristic of first rate mathematical work, no matter what the level. I have chosen the topics treated here because I remember how exciting and stirring I found them on first encounter. I want to share this sense of wonder with a larger audience and believe that many people, though unaware of it, have the minimal mathematical background needed to understand and enjoy the ideas described here; the basic material of a standard first high school course in algebra and geometry suffices. It is my earnest hope that some readers will come under the spell of these fascinating topics.
The book is modelled after The Enjoyment of Mathematics by Rademacher and Toeplitz, in my opinion one of the best popular mathematical expositions ever written.
The references given in each essay usually include my sources as well as appropriate material for those readers who wish to pursue the topic treated a little farther. The references in the bibliography at the end of this monograph are outstanding books in the general field of elementary mathematics and will nurture a growing interest. In this connection I want to mention specifically the periodical Scripta Mathematica which, specially during the years 1935–1957, was a veritable treasure trove of mathematical riches.
In some essays I have treated rather specific concrete problems, often neglecting or merely hinting at generalizations, while in others I have tried to generalize and abstract a bit more.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ingenuity In Mathematics , pp. 1 - 2Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 1970