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Euclid's Window

Euclid's Window
The Story of Geometry from Parallel Lines to Hyperspace  
This edition: eBook, 320 pages
Availability: Available for immediate download
List Price: $11.99
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Description

Through Euclid's Window Leonard Mlodinow brilliantly and delightfully leads us on a journey through five revolutions in geometry, from the Greek concept of parallel lines to the latest notions of hyperspace. Here is an altogether new, refreshing, alternative history of math revealing how simple questions anyone might ask about space -- in the living room or in some other galaxy -- have been the hidden engine of the highest achievements in science and technology.

Based on Mlodinow's extensive historical research; his studies alongside colleagues such as Richard Feynman and Kip Thorne; and interviews with leading physicists and mathematicians such as Murray Gell-Mann, Edward Witten, and Brian Greene, Euclid's Window is an extraordinary blend of rigorous, authoritative investigation and accessible, good-humored storytelling that makes a stunningly original argument asserting the primacy of geometry. For those who have looked through Euclid's Window, no space, no thing, and no time will ever be quite the same.

Curt Suplee The Washington Post High-spirited, splendidly lucid and often hilarious.
Michael Guillen author of Five Equations That Changed the World How often can you say that a book on math -- on math!
-- is a real page-turner? Well, this one is. As engaging as a soap opera, as fascinating as a whodunit, as funny as the Sunday comics, Mlodinow's book is storytelling at its best.
Brian Greene author of The Elegant Universe There is perhaps no better way to prepare for the scientific breakthroughs of tomorrow than to learn the language of geometry, and Euclid's Window makes this task lively and enjoyable.
Amir Aczelauthor of Fermat's Last TheoremEuclid's Window is a very good introduction to geometry, from Euclid to Einstein. Readable and entertaining.
David Berlinskyauthor of A Tour of the CalculusThis is an exhilarating book, one that celebrates geometry as one of mathematics' shining suns. And it is an important book, if only because that sun has for too long been covered by a number of scudding clouds. And it is, finally, a lovely book, one that reflects the radiance of its subject and so warms even as it instructs.