The year's finest mathematical writing from around the world
This annual anthology brings together the year’s finest mathematics writing from around the world. Featuring promising new voices alongside some of the foremost names in the field, The Best Writing on Mathematics 2020 makes available to a wide audience many articles not easily found anywhere else―and you don’t need to be a mathematician to enjoy them. These writings offer surprising insights into the nature, meaning, and practice of mathematics today. They delve into the history, philosophy, teaching, and everyday aspects of math, and take readers behind the scenes of today’s hottest mathematical debates.
Here, Steven Strogatz reveals how calculus drives advances in virology, Paul Thagard argues that the power of mathematics stems from its combination of realistic and fictional qualities, and Erica Klarreich describes how Hao Huang used the combinatorics of cube nodes to solve a longstanding problem in computer science. In other essays, John Baez tells how he discovered the irresistible attractions of algebraic geometry, Mark Colyvan compares the radically different explanatory practices of mathematics and science, and Boris Odehnal reviews some surprising properties of multidimensional geometries. And there’s much, much more.
In addition to presenting the year’s most memorable writings on mathematics, this must-have anthology includes a bibliography of other notable writings and an introduction by the editor.
This book belongs on the shelf of anyone interested in where math has taken us―and where it is headed.
It is incoherent as a book - different articles are aimed at entirely different readers. But there are good articles! A few groups:
I learned stuff!: The Inescapable Casino, Median voter theorem, Decades-old CS conjecture solved, Three-body problem, On your mark get set multiply Usually new intuitions, nothing formal. These were cool though. I wish the book was all like this.
I didn't learn much but it was an entertaining story about math or mathematicians: Taking Newton into the quantum world, Sid Sackson, Rubik's Cube, tenth Heegner number, Gauss Easter These were fun. "I didn't learn much" may be particular to me (in some cases like Rubik because I already had readit); I don't mean that they're fluff.
What the actual Fuchs: Kleinian and Quasi-Fuchsian Groups, Hyperbolic 3-manifold, Higher Dimensional Geometries These read like journal articles. By that I mean, I'm super lost. I'm like angry that they're included, because I bet 95% of readers (a weird self-selecting group in the first place) will just glaze over at best or get intimidated at worst.
Strogatz does it again. Such a good math expositor. Explains why a 3 drug cocktail is mathematically necessary for AIDS patients. And Ben Orlin celebrates the 1994 invention of Calculus.