Η "λωρίδα του Μέμπιους" έδωσε νέα προοπτική στα σύγχρονα μαθηματικά, προσέφερε χρήσιμες εφαρμογές στη βιομηχανία, πυροδότησε τη δημιουργικότητα καλλιτεχνών, ενέπνευσε παραγωγούς ταινιών επιστημονικής φαντασίας. Αυτή η τόσο απλή, κλειστή λωρίδα που δείχνει ότι δύο επιφάνειες μπορούν να μετατραπούν σε μία ενιαία, αναστατώνει τη δημιουργική σκέψη και τη φαντασία μας. Τα μυστικά της ερμηνεύονται από την τοπολογία: έναν κλάδο των μαθηματικών που μελετά ποιες χωρικές (Spatial) ιδιότητες ενός σώματος διατηρούνται αμετάβλητες ακόμη κι αν παραμορφώσουμε το σχήμα του, χωρίς να το σχίσουμε, να το τρυπήσουμε, να το σπάσουμε, ή να κολλήσουμε κάτι επάνω του.
Clifford Alan Pickover is an American author, editor, and columnist in the fields of science, mathematics, science fiction, innovation, and creativity. For many years, he was employed at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown, New York, where he was editor-in-chief of the IBM Journal of Research and Development. He has been granted more than 700 U.S. patents, is an elected Fellow for the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, and is author of more than 50 books, translated into more than a dozen languages.
This book is very dry. A mobius strip is a piece of paper twisted, and reconected, causing and endless circle effect. It keeps starting over, repeating itself. Yes, this aspect can be attributed to EVERYTHING in life. After several chapters it becomes clear this book itself is a mobius strip. The best part is the begining. Two limmericks kick it all off to set the tone.
A burlesque dancer quite fit, named Virginia could peel in a zip. But she read science fiction, and died of constriction attempting the Mobius strip.
Said the ant to his friends "I declare! This is a most vexing affair. We've been round and round, but all that we've found, is the other side just isn't there!"
Pro - The book contains many very nice riddles related to Möbius strips! The solutions are at the end, so you won't cheat unless you want to.
Con - Sometimes you really needed extra figures, for example when the author was describing the "Roman surface". - When talking about the possibility of a Möbius-like shaped universe, the author did not give the important remark that this is only science fiction or at least extremely unlikely. Good book on this subject: "A Universe from Nothing" by Lawrence M. Krauss. - Some book filling sections like the use of Möbius strip in arts and movies, a section about Mandelbrot, ...
Its a juxtaposition of various fields into one topic like a never-ending yo-yo that makes it an intriguing read though some passages were monotonous until you come to see amazing creativity at work via different cultures incorporatig this Mobius strip concept into their literature and artwork.
I read this in preparation to teach my new "Mobius Mindbender" slip stitch crochet class for CGOA. (The conference ended up being canceled due to the pandemic.)
It's a grab bag type of book, like a scrapbook of anything regarding the Mobius strip that interested the author. It was fun to read a book written in this style because I didn't really know what would come next. It was peppered with references to Mobius strips in literature. I'm surprised how much I enjoyed that, especially after a pretty heady or heavy section on the theoretical math side of the subject.
The experience of *crocheting* a true Mobius is important and underestimated. But then, most of crochet is underestimated.
I never know whether I like this stuff or not. I am guessing when I read this book before, but I am certain I did.
I think you can't stare at these too long or they confuse the eye. Well, I might have accidentally drawn one since I had no choice in the matter, but logically they are confusing to sort out on the paper.
Finding the end of the Möbius strip is challenging and makes me search for my blindfold which I lost years ago.
I suppose one could think of this as one of those exercise books, and so now my eyes are more fully exercised.
Pickover traces the origins of the Möbius strip from the mid-1800s, when the visionary scientist Dr. August Möbius became the first to describe the properties of one-sided surfaces, to the present, where it is an integral part of mathematics, magic, science, art, engineering, literature, and music. Today Möbius's strip is everywhere: it forms the familiar recycling symbol; freestyle skiers attempt a stunt called a “Möbius flip;” and it appears in the works of artists like M.C. Escher and writers like Arthur C. Clarke. This eclectic book is full of amusement and curiosity.
Pickover is obviously a genius, but he seems to lack an internal editor, and his publisher did not provide him with a book editor. Pity, because this book is rich with mathematical ideas and has bright illustrations facing every page of text.
Problem is, it's not a book, but a collection of everything concerning Möbius, discoverer of the famous one-side, one-face strip that bears his name. Because the book is about everything Möbius, it wanders far afield and arrives nowhere. Too non-linear for me, alas.
mobious was a crazy old cat; like barthes on watt's zentrip, a mathematical magician tells a grand history of the strip and its influences in the culture. more pirckover here: http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/Pickov...
Fascinating to discover Möbius strips not only in science and curiosity, but in literature, games, religion, technology, autism, magic... So many facets to this one-sided strip. The book is well written and fun to read.
Que no engañe el nombre, el libro relaciona la banda de Möebius con un huevo de cosas y a veces se va por las ramas hasta el punto de acabar hablando de darwinismo cosmológico.