Martin Gardner was an American mathematics and science writer specializing in recreational mathematics, but with interests encompassing micromagic, stage magic, literature (especially the writings of Lewis Carroll), philosophy, scientific skepticism, and religion. He wrote the Mathematical Games column in Scientific American from 1956 to 1981, and published over 70 books.
I've been working my way through Martin Gardner's books, and this one was quite disappointing. There was none of the math and few of the puzzles of his other books.
This book was actually about numerology. Sure, there is a very dry veneer of satire, but his own footnotes relate the large number of readers who actually took it seriously.
As numerology is the opposite of numeracy, so my rating of this book must be the opposite of those for his other books.
Mathematics and humour in the past have never to be seen mingling together... After I got introduced to Martin gardner through chance download over Thepiratebay, views, directions and perception on the whole changed.
Gardner is a man of information, after Dr. Doyle I find Gardner very interesting and humourous too. Give the book a read, you will find it pleasurable.
No he podido terminarlo (apenas puedo decir que lo haya empezado, la verdad): el tema de la numerología es diametralmente opuesto a la matemática, como la astrología a la astronomía. No es para mí.
Wonderful collection of number and word problems in vintage Gardner vein. I imagine some never realized he was playing, as I've seen the Kennedy-Lincoln bit for many years. And I've never stopped wondering how he had access to so much obscure information...and his analyses of the Bible - pre-computer database search days - are amazing.
Problemas matemáticos de (en ocasiones) muy difícil solución, sobre todo para el no versado. Sin embargo, el libro (un conjunto de artículos) no desfallece en ningún momento.
I was given this book by my middle school mathematics teachers. Sorry, don't remember much about it -- other than I liked it. Just going through old books...