Sinopsis de THE MATHEMATICAL CENTURY : THE 30 GREATEST PROBLEMS OF THE LAST 100 YEARS
The twentieth century was a time of unprecedented development in mathematics, as well as in all sciences: more theorems were proved and results found in a hundred years than in all of previous history. In The Mathematical Century, Piergiorgio Odifreddi distills this unwieldy mass of knowledge into a fascinating and authoritative overview of the subject. He concentrates on thirty highlights of pure and applied mathematics. Each tells the story of an exciting problem, from its historical origins to its modern solution, in lively prose free of technical details.
Odifreddi opens by discussing the four main philosophical foundations of mathematics of the nineteenth century and ends by describing the four most important open mathematical problems of the twenty-first century. In presenting the thirty problems at the heart of the book he devotes equal attention to pure and applied mathematics, with applications ranging from physics and computer science to biology and economics. Special attention is dedicated to the famous "23 problems" outlined by David Hilbert in his address to the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1900 as a research program for the new century, and to the work of the winners of the Fields Medal, the equivalent of a Nobel prize in mathematics.
This eminently readable book will be treasured not only by students and their teachers but also by all those who seek to make sense of the elusive macrocosm of twentieth-century mathematics.
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Princeton University Press
ISBN: 9780691128054
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 226
Encuadernación: Tapa blanda
Fecha de lanzamiento: 02/10/2006
Año de edición: 2006
Ancho: 14.0 cm
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Piergiorgio Odifreddi
Piergiorgio Odifreddi (Cuneo, 1950) ha estudiado Matemáticas en Italia, Estados Unidos y la ex Unión Soviética, y enseña Lógica en la Universidad de Turín y la Cornell Universiy. Colaborador de La Repubblica, l’Espresso, Le Scienza y Psychologies, dirige la colección de divulgación científica “La lente de Galileo” de la editorial Longaesi. En 1988 ganó el Premio Galileo de la Unión Matemática Italiana, en 2002 el Premio Peano de la Mathesis y en 2006 el Premio Italgas por la Divulgación. Es autor, entre otros libros, de Érase una vez una paradoja, Ideas, cálculos, experimentos, Elogio de la impertinencia y Por qué no podemos ser cristianos, todos ellos publicados por RBA.