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This is not just a history of geometry--it's a timeline of reason and abstraction, with all the major players present: Euclid, Descartes, Gauss, Einstein, and Witten, each represented by a minibiography.
Lots of examples pepper the narrative to help readers achieve their own "eureka!" And it's impossible not to be staggered at the mathematical feats of these geniuses, accomplished as many of them were in the absence of anything but observation and intense thought. Each story builds satisfactorily on the last, until at the end of this delightful book, one has a sense of having climbed a peak of understanding.
A working knowledge of basic geometry is helpful but not essential for enjoying Euclid's Window, and Mlodinow's chatty style lends itself remarkably well to explaining these deep and revolutionary concepts. --Adam Fisher --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
61 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Entertaining but flawed,
By
This review is from: Euclid's Window : The Story of Geometry from Parallel Lines to Hyperspace (Hardcover)
Mlodinow ('M' below) writes entertainingly, as most of the other reviews here testify. It's good that the general public get a taste of the excitement of discovery/invention in these fields. He should just correct, in a subsequent edition, the serious distortions that IAS Professor Langlands (Notices of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 49, number 5, p. 554 - referred to as 'L' below) has pointed out; then the book could be a useful, reliable introduction to whet the appetite of people who might want to study the subjects in more depth. Here are a few of Langlands' criticisms:1. M's portrayals of Proclus, Kant, Kronecker and Gauss' father are unfair caricatures. L provides evidence in their defense. 2. M strives for sensationalism, not fact. E.g., M speculates that Thales traded in leather dildos. Veracity is sacrificed to effect. 3. M missed the main point of Riemann's great 1854 habilitation lecture. L wrote: "I could hardly believe my eyes, but it seems [M] is persuaded that the introduction of elliptic geometry was the principal achievement of the lecture." Since M acknowledges on p.205 that Einstein's general theory of relativity was based on Riemann's work, M owes the reader much more explanation of Riemann's new ideas, expanding on his p. 207 discussion, not dismissing Riemann by saying his work "wasn't pretty." 4. L criticizes M's account of Einstein's early years, saying: "...to represent Einstein as an academically narrow, misunderstood or mistreated high-school dropout is a cruel disservice to any young reader or to any educator who swallows such falsehoods." 5. L concludes that M's book is "thoroughly dishonest ... simply because the author shrinks from nothing in his desperation to be readable and entertaining." I didn't dislike the book as much as L did. It would be a significant achievement to make great breakthroughs in mathematics and physics somewhat comprehensible to lay people in an entertaining way and to do so with integrity. Even L concedes "There would be little point in reviewing the book, were it not that the germ of an excellent monograph is there."
55 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Shape of Our Universe,
By Timothy Haugh (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Euclid's Window : The Story of Geometry from Parallel Lines to Hyperspace (Hardcover)
As a teacher of geometry, I always keep an eye out for books that offer coherent explanations of the importance of this most intriguing and ancient branch of mathematics. This books offers that in spades. In fact, it is one of the best basic overviews of the field I have ever come across.Mlodinow divides the history of the development of geometry into five major "revolutions." Starting first with Euclid and his Greek contemporaries, Mlodinow traces the field through Descartes and the development of analytic geometry, Gauss and the development of "non-Euclidean" geometries, Einstein and the physical application of these geometries, to Witten and the development of string theory--the attempt to understand the universe as a consequence of geometry. In high school we teach the basics of plane and analytic geometry but few people are aware of how the field has matured since then. This book takes us on that journey. And it is a wonderful one. Along the way he gives insight not only into the mathematics but also into the personalities that created it. We too often forget that it is people who created this magnificent structure and that it was not just handed down to us perfectly formed. Even more, we need to be reminded that the development continues and people are still contributing to it. The real achievement of this book, however, is its acessiblity. Despite the fact that most people will only have experience with the material from the first two sections of the book (Euclid and Descartes), Mlodinow's writing is understandable by anyone who has successfully navigated a course in high school geometry. In my view, he offers one of the most lucid explanations of Einstein's work and string theory that I have ever read. His style is engaging and very readable. The ability to bring the importance of mathematics to a general audience is a great gift that Mlodinow seems to have. I hope he continues to exploit it. If I have a complaint about this book, it is that it could have used a few more diagrams to help the less mathematically minded visualize his explanations. This is a minor point, however. Overall, this book is a great piece of work.
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A work both charming and profound,
By Frederick B. Rose (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Euclid's Window : The Story of Geometry from Parallel Lines to Hyperspace (Hardcover)
I found Euclid's Window charming and profound. Though Mlodinow's topic is ambitious, his ability to explain with incredible clarity some of the world's most abstruse thinking reminded me of Jim Gleick's work on Chaos. Mlodinow's storytelling seemed something altogether different--a lot more fun than Gleick.Building on historical anecdote, Mlodinow has stitched together a history of human thought for me in a way no one else has, explaining how millenia of physical observation have translated into conceptual thought. I worried that this might be heavy going, but Mlodinow glories in the fine line of tale and humor;it spills over in his prose with such ease that it appears unconscious. I suspect this may become something of a classic.
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