Mathematics and the Imagination.
With drawings and diagrams by Rufus Isaacs.
New York, Simon and Schuster, 1947
Mathematics and the Imagination covers complex mathematics, such as paradoxes, infinite sets, and unusual geometries, in clear language with numerous helpful illustrations. It is best known today for popularising the term 'googol', later to be mis-spelled when chosen as the name of the search engine. Author Edward Kasner (1878-1955) was a Columbia professor who specialised in differential equations, and he asked his young nephew to come up with a word for a large yet still finite number (one followed by a hundred zeroes). The term is introduced in chapter two, which is 'a very serious attempt to show how misused is the term infinite when applied to large and finite numbers' (Ryan, review in American Mathematical Monthly, December 1940). Kasner's co-author, James R. Newman (1907-1966) was not only a mathematician but also a lawyer and high-ranking diplomat, who served as Chief Intelligence Officer at the US Embassy in London and Counsel to the US Senate Committee on Atomic Energy, in which capacity he helped to draft the Atomic Energy Act of 1946.
Tenth printing; 8vo (200 x 130 mm); illustrations throughout the text; blue crushed morocco prize binding, spine gilt in compartments, boards blocked in gilt with the crest of the Choate Rosemary Hall school, gilt turn-ins, marbled endpapers, prize bookplate and inscription, spine tanned, extremities lightly rubbed but excellent condition; 380pp.
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