A Concise History of Mathematics

by Dirk J. Struik

Paper Book, 1948

Status

Available

Call number

510.09

Library's review

Indeholder "Introduction", "The Beginnings", "The Ancient Orient", "Greece", "The Orient after the Decline of Greek Society", "The Beginnings in Western Europe", "The Seventeenth Century", "The Eighteenth Century", "The Nineteenth Century", "Index".

Illustreret med 49 portrætter og tekster. Dirk J.
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Struik var professor i matematik på M.I.T. = Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Publication

New York : Dover, 1948. Second revised edition. Bibliography. Index. 60 illustrations, including Egyptian papyri, Greek manuscripts, portraits of 31 eminent mathematicians. xix + 299 pp. 5 3/8 x 8. S255. Paperbound. $1.75.

Description

This compact, well-written history covers major mathematical ideas and techniques from the ancient Near East to 20th-century computer theory, surveying the works of Archimedes, Pascal, Gauss, Hilbert, and many others. "The author's ability as a first-class historian as well as an able mathematician has enabled him to produce a work which is unquestionably one of the best." -- Nature.

User reviews

LibraryThing member paradoxosalpha
This volume delivers on its promise: an efficient, digestible history of mathematics up to (but excluding) the 20th century. The focus is unsurprisingly on the Western world. Although there are efforts (expanded in this 1967 revised edition) to take non-European mathematics into account in the
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sections on ancient and medieval periods, there is no recognition of any accomplishments outside of Europe in the modern era.

Since the book is rather short, it is prudently supported with a considerable bibliographic apparatus. A general bibliography constitutes the bulk of the introduction, and a more topical bibliography is appended to each of the eight chronological chapters. A full index of names helps make the volume useful for reference.

I have not had any formal study of mathematics since my undergraduate days, although I like to challenge myself periodically by reading math books that exceed my training. This one actually qualifies. Although it is primarily a history book, it constantly alludes to mathematical topics far in advance of what an accomplished college freshman calculus student is likely to have encountered. Even so, the book remained intelligible to me for the most part.

Author Struik goes some way toward offering ideas about how social and political circumstances impacted the development of mathematical ideas and techniques. He also remarks historical parallels in particular schools and periods of activity. The prose is fairly dry, but an effort is made to communicate the personalities of key mathematicians.

This read has sufficiently stoked my mathematical enthusiasm that I will be reading some actual math texts quite soon.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

xix, 299 p.; 20.3 cm

Local notes

Omslag: Ikke angivet
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Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi
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Thei Dover Edition is designed for years of use.
The paper is chemically the same quality as your would find in books priced $5.00 or more. It does not discolor or become brittle with age. Not artificially bulked, either; this edition is an unabridged full-length book, but is still easy to handle.
The binding. The pages in this book are SEWN in signatures. In the method traditionally used for the best books. These books open flat for eas reading and reference. Pages do not drop out, the binding does not crack and split (as is the case with many paperbacks held together with glue).
The type is legible: ;argoms are ample and allow for cloth rebinding.

Other editions

Pages

xix; 299

Library's rating

Rating

(18 ratings; 3.3)

DDC/MDS

510.09
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