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320 pages, Hardcover
First published April 17, 2023
"Mathematics is very much a tool when it comes to space flight... Though precision is important, perfection is not. However, this isn't true in much of mathematics, where the whole point is to discover exact relationships between specific things. These might be properties of shapes and mathematical functions, or even the point on the number line where something happens."It's not wrong but it sounds like a middle schooler wrote it... Anyways, it's not a major issue that I should spend time complaning about. The question I have about the second half is why global developments in math were de-emphasized, and stories about individual minorities in math were highlighted. Based on the telling by the book, it seems that sometime during the age of enlightenment, European math became *the* place for math progress, and so the authors began to describe the lives of individual European women mathematicians? (Of course they should be celebrated, but it's a strange shift in the storyline.)