The ancient Greeks discovered them, but it wasn't
until the nineteenth century that irrational numbers
were properly understood and rigorously defined, and
even today not all their mysteries have been revealed.
In The Irrationals, the first popular and comprehensive
book on the subject, Julian Havil tells the story of
irrational numbers and the mathematicians who have
tackled their challenges, from antiquity to the
twenty-first century. Along the way, he explains why
irrational numbers are surprisingly difficult to
define--and why so many questions still surround them.
That definition seems so simple: they are numbers that
cannot be expressed as a ratio of two integers, or that
have decimal expansions that are neither infinite nor
recurring. But, as The Irrationals shows, these are the
real ''complex'' numbers, and they have an equally
complex and intriguing history, from Euclid's famous
proof that the square root of 2 is irrational to Roger
Apry's proof of the irrationality of a number called
Zeta(3), one of the greatest results of the twentieth
century. In between, Havil explains other important
results, such as the irrationality of e and pi.He also
discusses the distinction between ''ordinary''
irrationals and transcendentals, as well as the
appealing question of whether the decimal expansion of
irrationals is ''random''. Fascinating and illuminating,
this is a book for everyone who loves math and the
history behind it. |
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