Concepts of Modern Mathematics

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Concepts of Modern Mathematics
Concepts of Modern Mathematics.jpg
Softcover edition
Author Ian Stewart
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Subject Mathematics
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher Dover publication
Publication date
1975
Media type Print
Pages 352 pages
ISBN 0-14-021849-1
OCLC 2020912
510
LC Class QA93 .S73

Concepts of Modern Mathematics is a 1975 book by mathematician and science popularizer Ian Stewart about recent developments in mathematics.[1]

Overview

The book arose out of an extramural class that Ian Stewart taught at the University of Warwick about "New math" (called "Modern mathematics" in the UK).[1] In the 1995 Dover edition Stewart wrote that the aim of the class was:

to explain why the underlying abstract point of view had gained currency among research mathematicians, and to examine how it opened up entirely new realms of mathematical thought.

The book is aimed at non-mathematicians. However, there are frequent equations and diagrams and the level of presentation is more technical than some of Stewart's other popular books such as Flatterland. Topics covered include analytic geometry, set theory, abstract algebra, group theory, topology, and probability.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Review of the 1995 Dover reprint of the 1981 edition, by G. A. Heuer (1996), MR 1319145.


<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>