Publisher:
The Mathematical Association of America
Published:
1992
Language:
English
Alibris ID:
17985508956
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Seller's Description:
Very Good- 0883855070. Former owner's name on verso front cover. Some pages with neat mathematical annotations in pencil. Bottom spine a little creased. Slight wear to spine, covers & corners.; Spectrum; Octavo; x, 372 pages.
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Seller's Description:
Good. 1st Printing. 8vo-over 7¾-9¾" tall. pp. 372. Minor edge and corner wear; lightly scuffed and scratched; spine is gently creased as well as the front of the wrapper; some light shelf wear; ex-library with the usual library markings; overall a nice used copy! Color illustrated wrapper with red and black lettering. 372 informative and educational pages! "A delightful collection of articles about people who claim they have achieved the mathematically impossible (squaring the circle, duplicating the cube); people who think they have done something they have not (proving Fermat's Last Theorem); people who pray in matrices; people who find the American Revolution ruled by the number 57; people who have in common eccentric mathematical views, some mild (thinking we should count by 12s instead of 10s), some bizarre (thinking that second-order differential equations will solve all problems of economics, politics and philosophy). This is a truly unique book. It is written with wit and style and is a part of folk mathematics....."