Home / Science / Mathematics / Probability - Statistics / Mathematical Problems: An Essay on Their Nature and Importance

Mathematical Problems: An Essay on Their Nature and Importance

AUTHOR
Price
€53.00
€106.00 -50%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Free shipping

The life and soul of any science are its problems. This is particularly true of mathematics, which, not referring to any physical reality, consists only of its problems, their solutions, and, most excitingly, the challenges they pose. Mathematical problems come in many flavours, from simple puzzles to major open problems. The problems stimulate, the stories of their successful solutions inspire, and their applications are wide.

The literature abounds with books dedicated to mathematical problems — collections of problems, hints on how to solve them, and even histories of the paths to the solutions of some famous ones. The present book, aimed at the proverbial “bright high-school student”, takes a different, more philosophical approach, first dividing mathematical problems into three broad classes — puzzles, exercises, and open problems — and discussing their various roles in one’s mathematical education. Various chapters are devoted to discussing examples of each type of problem, along with their solutions and some of the developments arising from them. For the truly dedicated reader, more involved material is offered in an appendix.

Mathematics does not exist in a vacuum, whence the author peppers the material with frequent extra-mathematical cultural references. The mathematics itself is elementary, for the most part pre-calculus. The few references to the calculus use the integral notation which the reader need not truly be familiar with, opting to read the integral sign as strange notation for area or as operationally defined by the appropriate buttons on his or her graphing calculator. Nothing further is required.

Author: Smorynski Craig
Publisher: SPRINGER
Pages: 406
ISBN: 9783030509194
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2020

1 Introduction.- 2 Logic Puzzles.- 3 Some Basic Mathematical Exercises.- 4 Probability.- 5 Graph Theory.- A Further Explorations.- Index.

Craig Smoryński got his PhD at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle with a dissertation on Kripke models for intuitionistic systems. This served as good background when he got involved in the birth and early development of provability logic, publishing the first mathematical textbook on the subject (Self-Reference and Modal Logic, Springer, 1985). He has written a number of books on mathematics and its history, most notably Logical Number Theory (Springer, 1991), Adventures in Formalism (College Publications, 2012), and MVT: A Most Valuable Theorem (Springer, 2017). In addition, he has contributed chapters to the Handbook of Mathematical Logic and the Handbook of Philosophical Logic.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist