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Hardcover ISBN: 0-8027-1499-4 ISBN 13: 978-0-8027-1499-2 Price: $25.00 320 pages Size: 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 August 2006
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King of Infinite Space
Donald Coxeter, The Man Who Saved Geometry
Siobhan Roberts
“There is perhaps no better way to prepare for the scientific breakthroughs
of
tomorrow than to learn the language of geometry.”
—Brian Greene, author of The Elegant Universe
The word “geometry” brings to mind an array of mathematical images:
circles, triangles, the
Pythagorean Theorem. Yet geometry is so much more than shapes and numbers; indeed,
it
governs much of our lives—from architecture and microchips to car design,
animated movies,
the molecules of food, even our own body chemistry. And as Siobhan Roberts elegantly
conveys in King of Infinite Space, there can be no better guide to the majesty
of geometry
than Donald Coxeter, perhaps the greatest geometer of the twentieth century.
Many of the greatest names in intellectual history—Pythagoras, Plato, Archimedes,
Euclid—
were geometers, and their creativity and achievements illuminate those of Coxeter,
revealing
geometry to be a living, ever-evolving endeavor, an intellectual adventure that
has always been
a building block of civilization. Coxeter’s special contributions—his
famed Coxeter groups and
Coxeter diagrams—have been called by other mathematicians “tools
as essential as numbers
themselves,” but his greatest achievement was to almost single-handedly
preserve the tradition
of classical geometry when it was under attack in a mathematical era that valued
all things
austere and rational.
Coxeter also inspired many outside the field of mathematics. Artist M. C. Escher
credited Coxeter
with triggering his legendary Circle Limit patterns, while futurist/inventor
Buckminster Fuller
acknowledged that his famed geodesic dome owed much to Coxeter’s vision.
King of
Infinite Space is an elegant portal into the fascinating, arcane world of geometry.
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