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13 Reviews
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42 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Add some DEPTH to your "Recreational Mathematics",
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
I spent quite a bit of time looking for a good "fractals" book. For me, this is it. It is not a book for everyone, though. I'll try to offer guidelines to help you decide if it is for you. In summary: (a) its not just a picture book, but extremely visual, (b) its not math-intense but asks for math-comfort and offers options and (c) its not only for computer jockeys, but offers repeated links to that approach.This book is doubtless great for a high-school or college course in fractals. But I think it is also a worthy buy, albeit a pricey one, for a certain type of layperson with a fascination for mathematics presented in some depth. If you enjoy math but find some of the "popularizations" a bit too shallow, then the realm of fractals and chaos is a great place to explore in depth. This is a fine guidebook for that exploration. "Chaos and Fractals" is not a book for the reader who is primarily fascinated with the visual representations of fractals. BUT it i!s chock-full of b/w illustrations (686 by the authors count) and nicely sprinkled with gorgeous color plates. The visual element is not central, but is very strongly represented and I found that almost every important concept was enhanced by the addition of a diagram or illustration. This is definitely a book that delves into the mathematics of fractals. It does so in a well-crafted dual-track form. The core of the book should be comfortable and enjoyable mathematical reading for anyone with a sound and fairly current familiarity with high school math (Not that such "currency" suggests its only for youngsters! This old-timer preserves essentially that level of math by regular exposure to recreational math and the like). On the second track, the book provides mathematically in-depth views of selected topics. This is really nice if you like to stretch your mathematical horizons since you can use the core to steady your foundation understanding of a topic and then dive int!o the advanced mathematical topics at will; mustering strategic retreat when necessary, without loss of face, but sometimes learning how more advanced mathematics can be used. Finally, the book makes an effort to scaffold some computer exploration of fractal concepts that succeeded for me but might not for you. For every chapter the authors provide a "Program of the Chapter" which allows exploration of one or more of the fractal forms and concepts explored therein. These are usually quite short and are written in Microsoft BASIC. This latter might be a problem for some. Nowadays, users with more advanced operating systems might not know where to find their version of BASIC (and it might not even be supplied), much less how to fire it up. I would not belabor the BASIC program element too much except that experimenting with such code is an excellent way for anyone to better understand an algorithmic process. A program is, after all, such a process - a sequence of !discrete steps. I'd urge you to search your Windows disk for something like an "oldmsdos" folder and dig out the Qbasic files found there and fire them up. Even if you've never written a program, this kind of applied-use is a fine way to learn! For the right sort of reader, this is unquestionably a 5-star book.
24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply a fantastic book,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
I purchased this book when it first came out, during the initial wave of popularity of fractals and chaos theory. Although the fadishness of chaos and fractals has died down, a number of solid applications for this theory have appeared in areas like computer graphics, finance, modeling computer network traffic and data compression. I have purchased a number of books on fractals and chaos and In the spectrum of popular science books, this is definitely "Chaos and Fractals" covers a great deal of material. On a few When this book was written, fractals and chaos were fairly new.
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Complex, but excellent,
By angelbob@andrew.cmu.edu (Pittsburgh, PA (USA)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
While Chaos and Fractals isn't really a book for the layman, I highly recommend it for those of you out there who want a deep and comprehensive look at these things. I've read several fractal books, some simple (FractalVision: Making Fractals Work For You), some highly mathematical (Fractal Image Compression, Science of Fractals), but this is easily the best of the lot, not only for in-depth but understandable reading, but also for separation. If you only want to learn about bifurcation in repeated iteration, or only about strange attractors, just pick the appropriate chapter. If you don't want to know about the more complex proofs, skip them; they're in small print and set off with lines to mark them as optional.
I do recommend some mathematical education and an interest in (not necessarily a talent for) proofs to get the most from this book. They cite a lot of stuff that you probably haven't seen before if you haven't had some college calculus, at least the basics. And you won't understand the more complex stuff (basic topology, mainly) unless you've had some kind of proofs-based calc course. However, even without that, it's a _really_ neat book. There's a lot here that even the layman can understand, it's just that he'll be intimidated by the set-off parts that prove the results he's only skimming. I highly recommend this to anyone who is serious about fractals, or thinks they might try to be so in the future. It will take quite some time for even a dedicated fractal enthusiast to become bored with the book, even if it's the only one you own.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent for intermediate knowledge of chaos,
By "josech" (Mexico City) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
This book is a great entertainer for anyone who wants to spend many evenings "playing with chaos". The code in the book is a little dated (BASIC), but you won't have problems to use it as a good reference. The book will guide you through the understanding of the exciting realm of chaos and its hidden monsters. Chaos and fractals are subjects that sound modern, interesting and eye-catching in the most of the cases. However, the applications and implications of chaos in the real world constitute the great achievement of human knowledge that the concept represents. The lecture of this book doesn't require an extensive knowledge of math (but it would be helpful), it requires many will and passion for rediscovering your conception of the universe instead. Before reading this book I'd recommend "Chaos: the Making of a New Science" by James Gleick and for those who are looking for a more compact but challenging material "Fractals, Chaos, Power Laws: Minutes from an Infinite Paradise" by Manfred Schroeder will be just fine.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Compare the editions,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
I found the 1992 edition of this book at my local public library, and was (like all the other reviewers here) very impressed at the quality. The book deals with a highly technical subject, but does it in a way that you can follow even if you don't have advanced math training. The numerous color plates were also very beautiful. And to top it all off, there were "do it yourself" exercises at the end of the chapters, showing you how to program your computer to run these figures! OK, they use the old BASIC language, but still the code is clear enough that you can follow it and see what's really going on with these equations.
So I was so pleased to see a copy of the updated edition at a bookstore. In particular, I was eager to see if they'd updated those "do it yourself" exercises for use with EXCEL. However, as I read through it I was disappointed to notice two changes from the previous edition: first, all of the programming examples had been eliminated; second, the print quality of the color plates was noticeably poorer. And I didn't see much new material added - in fact one of the reviews above observes that the text itself is virtually unchanged. Considering the steep price of this tome, these were significant points to consider. Used copies of the old edition cost under 20 bucks, and IMHO are a better deal (I ended up buying one). So if you're ready to buy, just do yourself (and your wallet) a favor and compare the two editions first.
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the best book every written about Chaos and fractals,
By A Customer
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
This is the absolute best book on chaos and fractals, it is not extremely complex so someone with little math or science background can understand it yet it goes into massive details and provides all formulas and equations with explanations, the entire book is easy to understand and contains so much knowledge. If you buy one book to deal with chaos and fractals it should be this one, it is the best!
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good introduction,
By Dr. Lee D. Carlson (Baltimore, Maryland USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
Chaos as a physical theory began essentially in the 1970's, but as a mathematical field it has existed since the early 1900's. This book covers only the mathematical study of chaos, and is addressed to those readers who have a fairly strong background in undergraduate mathematics. A knowledge of dynamical systems and measure theory would help in the appreciation of the book, but are not absolutely necessary. The application of fractals and chaos to finance is now legendary, but other applications, such as to packet networks and surface physics are not so well-known. Current research in chaos is done predominantly in the context of information theory, wherein the goal is to understand the difference between chaos and noise, and develop mathematical tools to quantify this difference. The BASIC code in the book gives away its age, but can be easily translated to one of the symbolic computing languages available now, such as Maple or Mathematica. This is a sizable book, and space prohibits a detailed review, but some of the more interesting discussions in it include: 1. The video feedback experiment, which can be done with only a video camera and a TV set. This is always a crowd pleaser, at whatever level of the audience it is presented to. 2. The comparison between doing iteration of a chaotic map on two different calculating machines: a CASIO and an HP. The difference is very dramatic, illustrating the effect of finite accuracy arithmetic. 3. The pictures illustrating the Chinese arithmetic triangle and Pascal's triangle as it appeared in Japan in 1781. 4. The space-filling curve and its relation to the problem of defining dimension from a topological standpoint. This discussion motivates the idea of covering dimension, which the authors overview with great clarity. They also give a rigorous definition of the Hausdorff dimension and discuss its differences with the box counting dimension. 5. The many excellent color plates in the book, especially the one illustrating a cast of the venous and arterial system of a child's kidney. 6. The difficulty in measuring power laws in practice. 7. Image encoding using iterated function systems, which has become very important recently in satellite image analysis. This leads into a discussion of the Hausdorff distance, which is of enormous importance not only in the study of fractals but also in general topology: the famous hyperspaces of closed sets in a metric space. 8. The relation between chaos and randomness, discussed by the authors in the context of the "chaos game." 9. L-systems, which are motivated with a model of cell division. 10. the number theory behind Pascal's triangle. 11. The simulation of Brownian motion. 12. The Lyapunov exponent for smooth transformations. 13. The property of ergodicity and mixing for transformations, the authors pointing out that true ergodic behavior cannot be obtained in a computer where only a a finite collection of numbers is representable. 13. The concept of topological conjugacy. 14. The existence of homoclinic points in a dynamical system. These are very important in physical applications of chaos. 15. The Rossler attractor and its pictorial representation. 16. How to calculate the dimensions of strange attractors. 17. How to calculate Lyapunov exponents from time series, which is of great interest in many different applications, especially finance. 18. The Julia set, which the authors relate eventually to potential theory.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well worth the cost,
By
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
This is possibly the best and most thorough of all books on fractals. The discussion is excellent, the illustrations superb. After all, these are the guys who developed the computer art exhibits that toured Europe and parts of the US in the 1980s.The mathematics is somewhat advanced, but not so advanced that most persons with a thorough background in high school mathematics cannot understand it. After all, I used it as a primary reference for my book Fractals in Music!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent for a Math/ Computer Science student,
By A Customer
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
As a Computer Science / Math student, I found the book extremely interesting! The book dose not give the reader explicit projects that other "textbook" offer, however I found my-self programming many small (and a few large ;-)) programs after reading different sections of the book. The authors explain the theory behind fractals and chaos so explicitly, that a programmer can write a quick program with out looking at the BASIC code at the end of the chapter. None the less, I found that the BASIC code did facilitate the learning process.The order in which the martial is presented is also excellent. There are three major sections of the book. The first dealing with "Classical Fractals", in which the authors explain many different algorithms to produce such objects. The second section explain Chaos theory and various extensions their of. Finally, the authors present modern fractals that include the Julia Set and the Mandelbrot Set. After reading the book, I found this the most effective way, not only to understand the mathematics behind the Julia Set and the Mandelbrot Set, but also the significant of these mathematical constructs. All though out the book, there are many references so one can explore further than the book goes on any particular topic. I found myself reading a book that was recommended by the authors which explains "L systems" further in depth. While I would not recommend this book for someone with out completing high school math, it is presented in such a manor that it is accessible to the student that wishes to have a basic understanding of fractals. However the more math one understands, the better able they will be to understand fractals. I would recommend the reader at least have some calculus and linear algebra under their belt to understand all the various topics presented in this book. I also would like to refute a previous reviewer's claim "that the authors are writing in a foreign language." This is simply not true, and I found the flow of the book to be quite excellent. In fact, I wish all of my textbooks had the authors grasp of the English language. I do agree the book "lack the common touch of a Clifford Pickover." However this book is almost a thousand pages long (much longer than any Pickover's books), and also carry's the price tag of a book that has real knowledge, instead of the pseudo knowledge that lies between the cover of a Pickover book.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent tutorial on nonlinearity,
By
This review is from: Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science (Hardcover)
At least 50% of this book can be well understood by any 1st year, exact science student. There are a couple of mathematical issues that are more senior-like, but never mind. With the appropriate teaching or guidance, a lot of practical, advanced tasks can be tackled down. I could use this book all along for giving examples for college (university), undergraduate students of almost every mathematical subject: numerical analysis, calculus, linear algebra, group theory, algorithm theory, visualization in 2 and 3 dimensions, topology...you name it, after reading this book. No fuzzy theory or wavelets or any other advanced statistical method for dynamical systems is formally mentioned, though. However the concept of measure is very well introduced and described with examples. For physics is not bad for dynamical systems theory. Although no Hamiltonian or Lagrangian formalism is mentioned, the description on how to obtain Lyapunov exponents out of a set of differential equations is very good. Engineers get their share too: useful examples are given about, e.g., feedback and control theory (mind you, it is not a book specialized in, say, robotic control using chaos theory, but it is a good start). For philosophers and the layman there are quite a few pages as well. The foreword from Mitchel Feigenbaum, just to give an example, tells us a kind of summary which "warms up" the reader and "exorcises away" the possible fantasies an unprepared reader could have regarding (or against or in favor of) the word "chaos". Nice color plates for those with artistic inclinations and the graphics are just so very well printed, you can practically "follow" their computation. Not a bad book at all for your personal (or institutional) library, I may say.
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Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science by Heinz-Otto Peitgen (Hardcover - February 12, 1993)
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