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Subject: [IP] What shall we talk about? New book by UC Riverside mathematician has 777 suggestions
John and I attended Stevens together and both belonged to the same fraternity. There is a wonderful illustration with me and a famous farberism (the only living person illustrated in the book). Fun book and great illustrations. Dave What shall we talk about? New book by UC Riverside mathematician has 777 suggestions (January 13, 2003) Author John de Pillis with Jay Leno, host of the Tonight Show, NBC. ------------------------------------------------------------------------RIVE RSIDE, Calif. - Ever had difficulty getting a conversation started? John de Pillis, emeritus professor of mathematics at UC Riverside, has useful suggestions to help us out. His new book "777 Mathematical Conversation Starters" (The Mathematical Association of America, 2002, 368 pages) shows that there are few degrees of separation between mathematics and topics that provoke interesting conversations. The topics presented in this unique book are accessible to mathematicians and non-mathematicians alike. They include thought-provoking conversation starters, such as: the value of fame; why language matters; the anatomy of thought; how we know what we know; how the Pythagorean theorem (with very little physics) shows that Einstein was correct about time dilation and distance contraction; and, how mathematics produces intuition-defying examples. The crossover book presents material that is of interest to the curious reader who may or may not have advanced mathematical training. There is material for those who choose to explore special relativity at an elementary level, while those who wish to delve more deeply are provided with detailed equations and explanations. Examples of talking points covered in the book are: How does the dry spot under a car after rain illustrate the difference between induction and deduction? Why was Monty Hall upset when mathematicians analyzed the Monty Hall problem? When does one bite of a potato become a life-altering experience? How can a finite amount of ink paint an infinite surface? And what is often referred to as "the weirdest result" in mathematics? <snip> http://www.newsroom.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/display.cgi?id=319 ------------------------------------- To unsubscribe or update your address, click http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
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