i've noticed that martin gardner's two aha! books can command the rapt attention of a bright ten or even eight year old. they'll read and reread them many times, just flipping past the stuff that looks too abstruse, unmotivated, or just weird exactly like a professional mathematician would with other material On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 1:38 AM, Stuart Anderson <stuart.errol.anderson@gmail.com> wrote:
Here's my list;
Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics - John Derbyshire ( some of it may be beyond a 15 year old, but then again ...) Fermat's Last Theorem - Simon Singh The Code Book - Simon Singh The Equation that Couldnt be Solved - Mario Livio The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, the World's Most Astonishing Number - Mario Livio Poincares Prize - George G Szpiro Four Colors Suffice - Robin Wilson Tracking the Automatic Ant - David Gale Finding Moonshine, A Mathematician's Journey Through Symmetry - Marcus Du Sautoy, Five Golden Rules - John Casti Labyrinths - Luis Borges -(not strictly mathematics - but there is 'The Unimaginable Mathematics of Borges Library of Babel' - William Bloch) The Tinkertoy Computer - A.K. Dewdney Cogwheels of the Mind, The Story of Venn Diagrams - AWF Edwards Flatterland - Ian Stewart, or any of his other recreational math books The Man Who Loved Only Numbers , The Story of Paul Erdös and the Search for Mathematical Truth - Paul Huffman Any/some of Clifford Pickovers books
- If he or she likes art as well as maths; Tilings and Patterns - Grunbaum and Shephard MC Escher - Sandra Forty
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-- Thane Plambeck tplambeck@gmail.com http://counterwave.com/