0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

Chances Are . . . - Adventures in Probability (Paperback): Michael Kaplan, Ellen Kaplan Chances Are . . . - Adventures in Probability (Paperback)
Michael Kaplan, Ellen Kaplan
R626 R552 Discovery Miles 5 520 Save R74 (12%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A compelling journey through history, mathematics, and philosophy, charting humanityas struggle against randomness

Our lives are played out in the arena of chance. However little we recognize it in our day-to-day existence, we are always riding the odds, seeking out certainty but settlingareluctantlyafor likelihood, building our beliefs on the shadowy props of probability. "Chances Are" is the story of manas millennia-long search for the tools to manage the recurrent but unpredictableato help us prevent, or at least mitigate, the seemingly random blows of disaster, disease, and injustice. In these pages, we meet the brilliant individuals who developed the first abstract formulations of probability, as well as the intrepid visionaries who recognized their practical applicationsafrom gamblers to military strategists to meteorologists to medical researchers, from blackjack to our own mortality.

The Nothing That Is - A Natural History of Zero (Hardcover): Robert Kaplan The Nothing That Is - A Natural History of Zero (Hardcover)
Robert Kaplan; Illustrated by Ellen Kaplan
R2,617 Discovery Miles 26 170 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A symbol for what is not there, an emptiness that increases any number it's added to, an inexhaustible and indispensable paradox. As we enter the year 2000, zero is once again making its presence felt. Nothing itself, it makes possible a myriad of calculations. Indeed, without zero mathematics as we know it would not exist. And without mathematics our understanding of the universe would be vastly impoverished. But where did this nothing, this hollow circle, come from? Who created it? And what, exactly, does it mean?

Robert Kaplan's The Nothing That Is: A Natural History of Zero begins as a mystery story, taking us back to Sumerian times, and then to Greece and India, piecing together the way the idea of a symbol for nothing evolved. Kaplan shows us just how handicapped our ancestors were in trying to figure large sums without the aid of the zero. (Try multiplying CLXIV by XXIV). Remarkably, even the Greeks, mathematically brilliant as they were, didn't have a zero--or did they? We follow the trail to the East where, a millennium or two ago, Indian mathematicians took another crucial step. By treating zero for the first time like any other number, instead of a unique symbol, they allowed huge new leaps forward in computation, and also in our understanding of how mathematics itself works.

In the Middle Ages, this mathematical knowledge swept across western Europe via Arab traders. At first it was called "dangerous Saracen magic" and considered the Devil's work, but it wasn't long before merchants and bankers saw how handy this magic was, and used it to develop tools like double-entry bookkeeping. Zero quickly became an essential part of increasingly sophisticated equations, and with the invention of calculus, one could say it was a linchpin of the scientific revolution. And now even deeper layers of this thing that is nothing are coming to light: our computers speak only in zeros and ones, and modern mathematics shows that zero alone can be made to generate everything.

Robert Kaplan serves up all this history with immense zest and humor; his writing is full of anecdotes and asides, and quotations from Shakespeare to Wallace Stevens extend the book's context far beyond the scope of scientific specialists. For Kaplan, the history of zero is a lens for looking not only into the evolution of mathematics but into very nature of human thought. He points out how the history of mathematics is a process of recursive abstraction: how once a symbol is created to represent an idea, that symbol itself gives rise to new operations that in turn lead to new ideas. The beauty of mathematics is that even though we invent it, we seem to be discovering something that already exists.

The joy of that discovery shines from Kaplan's pages, as he ranges from Archimedes to Einstein, making fascinating connections between mathematical insights from every age and culture. A tour de force of science history, The Nothing That Is takes us through the hollow circle that leads to infinity.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Vital BabyŽ NURTURE™ Ultra-Comfort…
R141 R103 Discovery Miles 1 030
Loot
Nadine Gordimer Paperback  (2)
R398 R330 Discovery Miles 3 300
Genuine Leather Wallet With Clip Closure…
R299 R246 Discovery Miles 2 460
Luca Distressed Peak Cap (Khaki)
R249 Discovery Miles 2 490
Logitech MK120 USB Wired Keyboard…
R299 R243 Discovery Miles 2 430
Mellerware Swiss - Plastic Floor Fan…
R371 Discovery Miles 3 710
Philips TAUE101 Wired In-Ear Headphones…
R199 R129 Discovery Miles 1 290
Kingmax USB 2.0 Flash Drive…
R249 R164 Discovery Miles 1 640
Top Gun 2-Movie Collection
Tom Cruise Blu-ray disc  (2)
R331 Discovery Miles 3 310
Alva 5-Piece Roll-Up BBQ/ Braai Tool Set
R550 Discovery Miles 5 500

 

Partners