The secret lives of numbers : a hidden history of math's unsung trailblazers / Kate Kitagawa and Timothy Revell.
Publisher: New York : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, 2023Copyright date: ©2023Edition: First US editionDescription: x, 310 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:- cartographic image
- still image
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0063206056
- 9780063206052
- Hidden history of math's unsung trailblazers
- 510.9 23
- QA21 .K48 2024
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Book | NMC Library | New Book Shelf | QA21 .K48 2024 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available Soon | 33039001528065 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: New Book Shelf Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
Q180.55 .S62 S88 2024 Rescuing science : restoring trust in an age of doubt / | Q334.7 .S433 2024 As if human : ethics and artificial intelligence / | Q335 .K68 2024 How AI works : from sorcery to science / | QA21 .K48 2024 The secret lives of numbers : a hidden history of math's unsung trailblazers / | QA76.2 .L6 A3 2023 The worlds I see : curiosity, exploration, and discovery at the dawn of AI / | QB450 .S626 2024 The sixth element : how carbon shapes our world / | QB581.9 .B695 2024 Our moon : how Earth's celestial companion transformed the planet, guided evolution, and made us who we are / |
First published in the United Kingdom by Viking.
Includes bibliographical references (pages [265]-284) and index.
In the beginning -- The turtle and the emperor -- A town called Alex -- The dawn of time -- On the origin(s) of zero -- The house of wisdom -- The impossible dream -- The (first) calculus pioneers -- Newtonianism for ladies -- A grand synthesis -- The mathematical mermaid -- Revolutions -- = -- Mapping the stars -- Number-crunching-- Epilogue.
"A new history of mathematics focusing on the marginalized voices who propelled the discipline, spanning the globe and thousands of years of untold stories. Mathematics shapes almost everything we do. But despite math's reputation as the study of fundamental truths, the stories we have been told about it are wrong -- warped like the sixteenth-century map that enlarged Europe at the expense of Africa, Asia, and the Americas. In The Secret Lives of Numbers, renowned math historian Kate Kitagawa and journalist Timothy Revell make the case that the history of math is infinitely deeper, broader, and richer than the narrative we think we know. Their story takes us from Hypatia, one of the first great female mathematicians, whose ideas revolutionized geometry and who was killed for them, to Karen Uhlenbeck, the first woman to win the Abel Prize, math's Nobel. Along the way we travel the globe to meet the brilliant Arabic scholars of the House of Wisdom, a math temple whose destruction in the siege of Baghdad in the thirteenth century was a loss arguably on par with that of the Library of Alexandria; Mādhava of Sangamagrama, the fourteenth-century Indian genius who uncovered the central tenets of calculus three hundred years before Isaac Newton was born; and the Black mathematicians of the Civil Rights era, who played a significant role in dismantling early data-based methods of racial discrimination. A thrilling tour through the richness of mathematics, The Secret Lives of Numbers is an immensely compelling narrative history."--Jacket flap.
There are no comments on this title.