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Mathematics and Logic (Dover Books on Mathematics) Reprint Edition

5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 18 ratings

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What is mathematics? How was it created and who were and are the people creating and practicing it? Can one describe its development and role in the history of scientific thinking and can one predict the future? This book is a thought-provoking attempt to answer such questions and to suggest the scope and depth of the subject.
The volume begins with a discussion of problems involving integers in which ideas of infinity appear and proceeds through the evolution of more abstract ideas about numbers and geometrical objects. The authors show how mathematicians came to consider groups of general transformations and then, looking upon the sets of such subjects as spaces, how they attempted to build theories of structures in general. Also considered here are the relations between mathematics and the empirical disciplines, the profound effect of high-speed computers on the scope of mathematical experimentation, and the question of how much mathematical progress depends on "invention" and how much on "discovery." For mathematicians, physicists, or any student of the evolution of mathematical thought, this highly regarded study offers a stimulating investigation of the essential nature of mathematics.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Mark Kac was a distinguished mathematician formerly of the Rockefeller Institute and Cornell University. Stanislaw M. Ulam was a well-known nuclear scientist and mathematician who worked on the Manhattan Project and taught at Harvard University and the Universities of Wisconsin and Colorado.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Dover Publications; Reprint edition (May 1, 1992)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 192 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0486670856
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0486670850
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 7.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.75 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 18 ratings

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18 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2010
when learning mathematics or any subject in general, it is important to draw some connections between what you're currently studying with what's out there. these bridges between different areas give you a sense of the greater beauty at work as you start to see the whole picture. kac and ulam have done this masterfully with their gem of a book, "mathematics and logic." in so doing, the authors convey to the reader some idea of why mathematicians think the way they do.

imagine yourself in a room with two seasoned mathematicians. a conversation is struck and the two mathematicians start talking about some topic that they find interesting. this topic has some connection to another topic, so they begin talking about that. now, a third topic shows up on the scene, so the mathematicians start expounding a bit on this newly arrived animal, only to get to yet another animal on the horizon. and so forth. that's how things go for the first hundred pages or so as the zoo grows! in general, such a style could quickly become an incoherent rambling mess, but this is not the case here. the transitions are not too abrupt and the reader does get a sense of why things pop up when they do. the book even closes with some chapters explicitly laying out the common threads that have woven these selected topics together. very nice.

the topics covered include the usual suspects that often show up in popular expository math books, subjects like elementary number theory, combinatorics, basic group theory, probability, gödel's incompleteness theorems, turing machines, special relativity, and so on. however, the authors also throw in some topics from left field such as braid theory, information theory, and homology. i was pleasantly surprised that homology was covered since whenever algebraic topology shows up outside of bona fide textbooks, it's usually homotopy that makes an appearance, not homology. kac and ulam make the effort to treat the harder to understand and arguably more useful of the two. that's noteworthy.

unless you've already attained a good amount of so called "mathematical maturity," and/or have seen some of these topics before, then there's a very good chance that you're not going to understand everything in this book. the topics are vast and could easily take up an entire lifetime to really study. don't worry if you don't get something! read that part lightly or even skip it! read this book to have some idea of what's out there, read it for culture, and read it to understand the process of synthesis. the curious reader, regardless of background, should also be able to pick up some new pieces of math from this book and that should give the reader some avenues to explore later in greater depth.

compared to the usual popular math books, this book is significantly harder to read. an upper level undergrad or a graduate student will get the most out of this book, although everyone will get something out of it. if you're a graduate student looking for some casual reading material for your subway/bus commute, but don't want the math dumbed down too much, then this book is perfect for you. note that struggle is a natural part of the mathematical learning process so anyone who's even remotely interested in this book should give it a shot. it's an affordable dover book so there's very little to lose!

lastly, for those who enjoy this sort of coverage of a wide number of mathematical topics without compromising too much on the meat of the matter, i highly recommend "the princeton companion to mathematics," edited by timothy gowers. it deals with almost all areas of higher math at a sophisticated level, while sweeping away enough of the technical details to still be considered "casual" reading. "the princeton companion to mathematics" is "mathematics and logic" on steroids.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2011
This is a wonderful book by two superstars and it's a miracle that it got written. It was commissioned by the Encyclopedia Britannica for their 200th anniversary. It explains very simply some of the most important examples of the turning of mathematical problems into algebraic or combinatorial ones, and then solving them. Groups are used to tell whether two braids are equal or not, Sperner's combinatorial lemma on triangles is used to prove Brouwer's fixed point theorem, and it gives a method of computing the fixed point too!

I love this book so much that I took the trouble to make up a list of corrections and additions. I didn't find any errors. It's just that some new results have been proved since 1968. The list is quite small and I am trying to find a home for it. Here I will just say that Hilbert's tenth problem was solved in 1970 and Fermat's last theorem was proved in 1995, but the other major open problems they mention are still open. For example, it is still not known whether Euler's constant C is irrational.
9 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2019
This book is not for everyone. It's a treasure for those willing to take time and go through it slowly to enjoy how both simple and complex mathematic equations are explained in rather novel ways by two geniuses of math.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2017
Most excellent, could use an index. Great survey of mathematics & logic.
Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2004
The audience for ths book is people with background in mathematics. They teach many branches briefly with their examples in Chapter 1, but the presentation is at a fairly sophisticated level.
I found the historical and philosophical remarks very valuable, coming from authorities like these two men. Examples (slightly edited by me):
The great analysts of the 18th and 19th centuries (e.g., Newton, Leibniz, Bernoulli, Euler, Lagrange ...) had an almost unerring instinct for presenting valid results and plausible proofs without a firm basis in formal systems and without strict adherence to standards of logical rigor... Mathematical intuition in the hands of people of genius has such a clarity and unity that it anticipates special formalisms.
Mathematics is a science; it is also an art. The criteria of judgment in mathematics are always aesthetic, at least in part... One looks for `usefulness,' for `interest,' and also for `beauty.' Beauty is subjective, yet it is surprising that there is usually considerable agreement among mathematicians concerning aesthetic values.
It is a distinctive feature of mathematics that it can operate effectively and efficiently without defining its objects. Points, straight lines and planes are not defined... One need not know what things are so long as one knows what statements about them one is allowed to make [the axioms]... Other statements involving these undefined words can then be deduced by logic alone. This permits geometry to be taught to a blind man and even to a computer!
21 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2001
With new mathematics growing wild in the trees in the new century, one should review those things that have given modern mathematics direction and flavor. This classic little book sits along side of Sawyer's " Prelude to Mathematics" as the go to books for basic understanding. To these books I have added an unlikely candidate " Elliptical Curves" by McKean and Moll. If one has these three books, he will have a crack in the dam of mathematics...
14 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2001
Kac and Ulam were both strong mathematicians; this encyclopedia article which they coauthored provides a nice counterweight to the answers-without-questions view of math which can result from a little indifferent coursework.
Easy and lively reading, written for everyone.
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Top reviews from other countries

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oscar mendizabal
5.0 out of 5 stars Brief, clear.
Reviewed in Mexico on March 14, 2019
Tough but fun read. Must have a middle to advanced level of math.
Kenneth Vincent Lever
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 7, 2016
Good stuff, but not easy
Nicolas Moscicki
5.0 out of 5 stars Un peu atypique mais, très panoramique et intéressant!
Reviewed in France on February 12, 2014
L'Auteur procède en quatre étapes:

Il commence par un large éventail des exemples historiques de ce que sont les mathématiques :
* Des problèmes. - D'où viennent-ils? Comment ils interfèrent (se provoquent, s'éclairent, s'enchaînent... - se généralisent et se particularisent)?
* De ce que (parmi les questions accessibles à tous) toujours - non seulement, on ne sait pas(!) mais, aussi, on ne sait même pas comment s'y prendre!

Il met de l'ordre en esquissant les grands thèmes, tendances, synthèses-"patterns" internes...

Il examine les rapports avec les sciences expérimentales.
* En aval, efficacité (étonnante applicabilité) des mathématiques (purs "jeux de l'esprit") dans l'exploration-description du monde dit "extérieur"?!
* En amont, les mathématiques "quasi expérimentales" - car, à l'écoute-anticipation permanente du monde "extérieur"?!

Il termine par résumer le passé et se projeter dans l'avenir.

Tout ceci, en 170 pages, de façon claire et, autant que je puisse juger, accessible aux non-spécialistes... - Sur un ton plutôt anecdotes (détails pertinents) que manuel (description aseptisée).
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