Joel Segel

Joel Segel

סופר


1.
This book traces the history of the MIT Department of Mathematics one of the most important mathematics departments in the world through candid, in-depth, lively conversations with a select and diverse group of its senior members. The process reveals much about the motivation, path, and impact of research mathematicians in a society that owes so much to this little understood and often mystified section of its intellectual fabric, exemplified by names like Euclid, Newton, Euler, and Goedel.

At a time when the mathematical experience touches and attracts more laypeople than ever, such a book contributes to our understanding and entertains through its personal approach.

From the book:
The usual thing is there were these Thursday colloquiums at MIT or Harvard, and even the mathematicians from Brown would come. They would invite some speaker to give a mathematical talk. And afterward there was a dinner and a party in somebody's house. If it was in one guy's field, he would make the party. So that's how they socialized. They couldn't socialize with people who'd talk about tomatoes or clothes or something; they had to talk to people who understood the values they had, which were mathematical values. They're attracted to mathematics like a drug addict is attracted to drugs. They can't stay away from it.;
--Fagi Levinson...







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