Alexander White

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The answer lies in a fundamental property of mathematics—in a sense, the very property that has made mathematics so magnificently useful to scientists. In math there are many, many complicated objects, but only a few simple ones. So if you have a problem whose solution admits a simple mathematical description, there are only a few possibilities for the solution. The simplest mathematical entities are thus ubiquitous, forced into multiple duty as solutions to all kinds of scientific problems. The simplest curves are lines. And it’s clear that lines are everywhere in nature, from the edges of ...more
How Not to Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking
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