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A Passion for Mathematics: Numbers, Puzzles, Madness, Religion, and the Quest for Reality
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A Passion for Mathematics: Numbers, Puzzles, Madness, Religion, and the Quest for RealityA Passion for Mathematics: Numbers, Puzzles, Madness, Religion, and the Quest for Reality
A singular collection of fascinating information for those who share a love of all things mathematical A Passion for Mathematics is a delightful, dizzying, and entertaining trip that includes an eclectic mix of history, biography, definitions, number theory, and mind-bending problems. Readers will encounter mad mathematicians, religious mathematicians, strange number sequences, obstinate numbers, curious constants, zany math problems, classic recreational puzzles, magic squares, fractal geese, monkeys typing Hamlet, infinity, and much, much more!
411 pages.
 
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Tags: Passion, Mathematics, Reality, mathematicians, Quest
Indian Maths [Science; History; Advanced Listening; mp3]
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Indian Maths

Mathematics from the Indian subcontinent has provided foundations for much of our modern thinking on the subject. They were thought to be the first to use zero as a number. Our modern numerals have their roots there too. And mathematicians in the area that is now India, Pakistan and Bangladesh were grappling with concepts such as infinity centuries before Europe got to grips with it. There’s even a suggestion that Indian mathematicians discovered Pythagoras’ theorem before Pythagoras.

Some of these advances have their basis in early religious texts which describe the geometry necessary for building falcon-shaped altars of precise dimensions. Astronomical calculations used to decide the dates of religious festivals also encouraged these mathematical developments.

So how were these advances passed on to the rest of the world? And why was the contribution of mathematicians from this area ignored by Europe for centuries?

 
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Tags: these, Indian, mathematicians, Europe, religious
Negative numbers - how they spread across civilizations [Science; Advanced Listening; mp3]
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Negative numbers - how they spread across civilizations [Science; Advanced Listening; mp3]In 1759 the British mathematician Francis Maseres wrote that negative numbers "darken the very whole doctrines of the equations and make dark of the things which are in their nature excessively obvious and simple". Because of their dark and mysterious nature, Maseres concluded that negative numbers did not exist, as did his contemporary, William Friend. However, other mathematicians were braver. They took a leap into the unknown and decided that negative numbers could be used during calculations, as long as they had disappeared upon reaching the solution.

 
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Tags: numbers, negative, mathematicians, Negative, equations, nature, Maseres, their