1st Edition

From Zero to Infinity What Makes Numbers Interesting

By Constance Reid Copyright 2006
    208 Pages
    by A K Peters/CRC Press

    208 Pages
    by A K Peters/CRC Press

    From Zero to Infinity is a combination of number lore, number history, and sparkling descriptions of the simply stated but exceedingly difficult problems posed by the most ordinary numbers that first appeared in 1955 and has been kept in print continuously ever since. With the fifth edition this classic has been updated to report on advances in number theory over the last 50 years, including the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. Deceptively simple in style and structure, it is a book to which the reader will return again and again, gaining greater understanding and satisfaction with each reading.

    Zero; 1: One; 2: Two; 3: Three; 4: Four; 5: Five; 6: Six; 7: Seven; 8: Eight; 9: Nine; e: Euler's Number; ? 0: Aleph-Zero

    Biography

    Constance Reid

    "I (an undergraduate comp sci major) personally enjoyed this book. The author clearly has a love of numbers that can prove infectious. … the proofs given are all clear and easy to understand."
    SIGACT News, 2014

    "Upon reading this edition anew, I was struck by its superb mathematical taste. I knew I was meant to spend my life loving numbers and working with them; From Zero to Infinity crucially told me that there was a large community of People of Number I could hope to join when I grew up. … As I got older, I continued to read From Zero to Infinity and the other influential math books I knew … I was truly fortunate to have run across From Zero to Infinity when I did."
    —Bruce Reznick, Notices of the AMS, February 2007


    "This book should be in the library of every mathematics teacher, and university faculty who prepare students to teach mathematics should also own this book."
    —Murray H. Siegel, Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, February 2007

    "… a sequence of rare beauty, a drama built out of nothing but numbers—and imagination."
    —Freeman Dyson, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton


    "… singular for its insight into the imagination, relevance, and sheer excitement of mathematics."
    Kirkus Bulletin, November 2005