

Buy The Magic of Math: Solving for x and Figuring Out Why Reprint by Benjamin, Arthur (ISBN: 9780465096213) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: Book not disappointing and arrived promptly - Very good book for explaining the magic of numbers in all mathematical academia. Review: Five Stars - A fascinating book, full of interesting characteristics of numbers and understandable proofs for matters we take for granted.
| Best Sellers Rank | 466,904 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 35 in Combinatorics & Graph Theory 196 in Popular Mathematical Theory 203 in Algebra (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (380) |
| Dimensions | 20.96 x 2.54 x 13.97 cm |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0465096212 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0465096213 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 336 pages |
| Publication date | 6 Sept. 2016 |
| Publisher | Basic Books |
B**P
Book not disappointing and arrived promptly
Very good book for explaining the magic of numbers in all mathematical academia.
H**N
Five Stars
A fascinating book, full of interesting characteristics of numbers and understandable proofs for matters we take for granted.
N**Z
Good book
A lot of information ‼️
R**Y
An excellent book with many querky examples and stories
An excellent book with many querky examples and stories. I was reminded of things I learned 70 years ago, some of which I had forgotten, and I learned some things I had never learned before. It's a book I can dip into at any chapter and find items of interest, without having to follow on from previous chapters. Well worth buying.
P**H
Excellent book for anyone with even the slightest interest in ...
Excellent book for anyone with even the slightest interest in numbers. Well written with good explanations and examples throughout in plain english. It is 'Magic'
L**J
The magic of number 9
Great book and very interesting.
B**G
Not for everyone, but will appeal to maths enthusiasts
There are broadly three types of popular maths. There are books like A Brief History of Infinity which introduce mathematical concepts and history without actually doing any maths - and these can be fascinating. There are books of recreational maths, like Martin Gardner's classic Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, or Ian Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities, which explore the weird and wonderful of maths, with a need for a bit of practical working out, but almost always provide plenty of fun along the way. And there are book like the Magic of Maths. (Could I say, by the way, how grateful I am that the UK edition has that 's' on 'maths'.) Almost always written by mathematicians, such books set out to prove to the masses who think that actually getting your hands dirty and doing mathematics is too hard or too boring that it's really easy and enjoyable too. To give him his due, Arthur Benjamin makes a good stab at this - one of the best I've seen. He tells us we're going to learn clever little tricks that will allow us to do amazing things with mental arithmetic - for instance multiplying surprisingly big numbers in our heads. And he delivers. It really works, and we can amaze ourselves, though probably not our friends, because if other readers are anything like me they will have forgotten most of the techniques by the time they finish the next chapter. Benjamin also takes on the likes of algebra, Fibonacci numbers, geometry, trigonometry, imaginary numbers, calculus and more. And going on the pages of testimonials from maths professors in the front, this is the kind of thing maths-heavy people love. And that's fine. But for most of us I'd say 80 per cent of the book is not going to be appreciated. Early on, Benjamin tells us we shouldn't mind skipping pages or even chapters. But when you find yourself skipping most of the content, it begins to feel as if it wasn't a great thing to read in the first place. In one of those fruitless exercises in saying the whole world is your audience, Benjamin comments that the book is for anyone who will one day take a maths course, is taking a maths course or is finished taking maths courses. I'd say the audience is a lot tighter. It's for people who one day will take a maths degree, or took one years ago and wants to reminisce. It's just too number heavy and narrative light to work for me. And I have taken a maths course. But I certainly don't want take another - and this has reminded me why. I have to emphasise that the book is by no means all bad. Benjamin does introduce some fun, and weird and wonderful stuff, like the apparent demonstration that infinity is equal to -1/12 (though I've seen better explanations of why this demonstration falls apart). But far too often what Benjamin thinks is fun is just 'So what?' to us lesser mortals.
F**E
The Magic of Maths
Entertaining, educational and funny.
大**崇
面白い本だ。数学も英語で読むと分かったような気がするから不思議。次は「WHY MATH」を読もう。
T**L
Makes math fun. There was a lot of information I didn't know and new ways of looking at some things I did.
A**V
This book is absolutely meant for maths lovers. Do u know the proof for why (-)*(-) is (+). If no, then u should buy this book.
Z**R
Honestly pretty great!! Lot of books tell you how to do exactly the formulas you need to solve certain problems, but very few books. Tell you easy ways to think about the math involved. Reading this to learn easy ways to think about the math, makes it easier to practically skip steps and save time. This was honestly hugely beneficial to me when studying for the GRE.
M**O
Muito bom! Gostei das propriedades "matemágicas" do 9, das séries infinitas, dos quadrados mágicos, da demonstração da equação de Euler! Este livro é indicado, também, para não especialistas. A linguagem é clara.
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