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Amir Alexander teaches history at UCLA. He is the author of Geometrical Landscapes and Duel at Dawn. His writing has appeared in The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, and his work has been covered by Nature, The Guardian, NPR, and others. He lives in Los Angeles.

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I can think of a number of counterexamples to the author's claim that natural scientists can't be Byronic heroes. Victor Frankenstein, anyone? (I never said they had to be real people.) He's right about engineers, though.
 
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soulforged | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 7, 2024 |
Amazing history of the interplay of nascent science, entrenched theology and flailing politics of the age culminating in the birth of the modern world. Back when mathematics was truly controversial.
 
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Paul_S | 7 andere besprekingen | Dec 23, 2020 |
Pre-Birth of The Calculus... does metaphysics matter? The outer brackets of this book might be from Luther's pinned-up Theses to the Glorious Revolution in the UK in 1688. The medieval world was stable, even stagnant. The modern world is fertile and chaotic. Alexander understands that metaphysics - the foundations of mathematics - is not the sole determiner of social transformation. But the philosophy of mathematics is right there in the fray. It has a seat at the table. Just like today, Turing's Halting Theorem went from a curiosity of mathematical logic to the seed of our ongoing transformation into some kind of cybernetic society. What kind, it's not easy to predict with any confidence!

I especially liked the descriptions of some of Wallis's reasoning here. I'm a math-physics-engineering geek, so this stuff is deep in my bones. But to be able to peek over Newton's shoulder to see where his ideas came from - just a delight!

There's not too much math here. Alexander works hard to help the reader stay on track. This is really a history book, with just enough math to be able to follow the action. It'd be fun to do a parallel math book, to explore much more fully why experimental mathematics is not so reliable, and e.g. how did Cauchy convergence develop out of Wallis's experiments with infinite series.

But now, in the midst of this coronovirus pandemic, that puts a spear point on the climate change cudgel - people are looking for certainties, when scientists can only offer possibilities and probabilities. We are edging closer to yet another religion versus science war, and the stakes could hardly be higher. This book is a nice refresher course on how ideas matter.
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kukulaj | 7 andere besprekingen | Apr 18, 2020 |
I truly enjoyed this book and definitely recommend it.

Admittedly I had expected more on the evolution and rationale of the method of infinitesimals. Instead I encountered a vivid story about the power struggles, the religious fervors, and the contests of ideas and ideals during 16th and 17th century Europe that were intertwined with this “dangerous” mathematical tool. I felt Amir Alexander pulled together these diverse currents into a cohesive, rich tale. The method of infinitesimals held a latent and un-tapped power. And those who dared say they played with it to solve as yet unsolved problems invited tragedy and triumph upon themselves.

Why would the Society of Jesus and the Roman Catholic Church regard a mathematical theory as heresy? Moreover, why were the Jesuits driven to orchestrate smear campaigns to discredit the brightest and most creative scientific minds in Italy in the first half of the 17th century? Why did they feel like they had to ruin their lives? The Jesuits did this so completely that Italy’s brilliant candles of scientific innovation were effectively blotted out? Why would the nobles and royalist-sympathizers of post-medieval Europe fear an infinitely small quantity, believing it could unleash chaos and more civil war in England in the second half of the 17th century? Why indeed.

Amir builds the backstory of these fears and weaves them into the many skirmishes and outright public battles the method of infinitesimals had endured. Italy lost. England won. Had it not, the modern world might still be in the Dark Ages.
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AndreM | 7 andere besprekingen | Jan 30, 2020 |

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6
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486
Populariteit
#50,828
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3.8
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10
ISBNs
15
Talen
2

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