Amusements in Mathematics (Illustrated)

Fiction & Literature, Classics, Historical
Cover of the book Amusements in Mathematics (Illustrated) by Henry Ernest Dudeney, @AnnieRoseBooks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Henry Ernest Dudeney ISBN: 1230000953832
Publisher: @AnnieRoseBooks Publication: January 7, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Henry Ernest Dudeney
ISBN: 1230000953832
Publisher: @AnnieRoseBooks
Publication: January 7, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

In issuing this volume of my Mathematical Puzzles, of which some have appeared in periodicals and others are given here for the first time, I must acknowledge the encouragement that I have received from many unknown correspondents, at home and abroad, who have expressed a desire to have the problems in a collected form, with some of the solutions given at greater length than is possible in magazines and newspapers. Though I have included a few old puzzles that have interested the world for generations, where I felt that there was something new to be said about them, the problems are in the main original. It is true that some of these have become widely known through the press, and it is possible that the reader may be glad to know their source.

On the question of Mathematical Puzzles in general there is, perhaps, little more to be said than I have written elsewhere. The history of the subject entails nothing short of the actual story of the beginnings and development of exact thinking in man. The historian must start from the time when man first succeeded in counting his ten fingers and in dividing an apple into two approximately equal parts. Every puzzle that is worthy of consideration can be referred to mathematics and logic. Every man, woman, and child who tries to "reason out" the answer to the simplest puzzle is working, though not of necessity consciously, on mathematical lines. Even those puzzles that we have no way of attacking except by haphazard attempts can be brought under a method of what has been called "glorified trial"—a system of shortening our labours by avoiding or eliminating what our reason tells us is useless. It is, in fact, not easy to say sometimes where the "empirical" begins and where it ends.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In issuing this volume of my Mathematical Puzzles, of which some have appeared in periodicals and others are given here for the first time, I must acknowledge the encouragement that I have received from many unknown correspondents, at home and abroad, who have expressed a desire to have the problems in a collected form, with some of the solutions given at greater length than is possible in magazines and newspapers. Though I have included a few old puzzles that have interested the world for generations, where I felt that there was something new to be said about them, the problems are in the main original. It is true that some of these have become widely known through the press, and it is possible that the reader may be glad to know their source.

On the question of Mathematical Puzzles in general there is, perhaps, little more to be said than I have written elsewhere. The history of the subject entails nothing short of the actual story of the beginnings and development of exact thinking in man. The historian must start from the time when man first succeeded in counting his ten fingers and in dividing an apple into two approximately equal parts. Every puzzle that is worthy of consideration can be referred to mathematics and logic. Every man, woman, and child who tries to "reason out" the answer to the simplest puzzle is working, though not of necessity consciously, on mathematical lines. Even those puzzles that we have no way of attacking except by haphazard attempts can be brought under a method of what has been called "glorified trial"—a system of shortening our labours by avoiding or eliminating what our reason tells us is useless. It is, in fact, not easy to say sometimes where the "empirical" begins and where it ends.

More books from Historical

Cover of the book Sam Spur 5: The Cimarron Kid by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book The Last Relicuin by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Marius (Los Miserables #3)(Cronos Classics) by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Under a Painted Sky by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Her Loving Husband's Curse by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Flowers on Stone by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Mourning de Pachmann by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book De held van Pannotia by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book A Scandalous Proposal by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book The Greek Carpenter's Touch by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book The Bee Keeper's Daughter by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book The Mailmen of Elmwood by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Étude biographique sur Sully by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Mrs Mulholland by Henry Ernest Dudeney
Cover of the book Burn My Soul :Part I by Henry Ernest Dudeney
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy