Lee Kraftchick discusses some of his favorite books for non-mathematicians to explore the breadth of mathematics. These books range from very old to current. Some discuss beautiful proofs, whether math is invented or discovered, and how to think. Lee and Carol agree on the number one greatest book for mathematicians and non-mathematicians alike. See the full list at theartofmathematicspodcast.com.
--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-art-of-mathematics/messageEgyptian Fractions
Da Vinci's Math Teacher: Merging the Practical and Theoretical
Alon Amit, sharing the mathematical journey in Quora and Math Circles
Too Much Math in the Schools? These Books Counter That Narrow View
Reflecting on Kaleidoscopes
Meet the young Davidson Fellowship winners
Gödel's Incompleteness, Fundamental Truths, and Reasoning in Math and Law
Math and the Law
Fabulous Fibonacci
Vowels and Sounds and a Little Calculus
The Hat: A Newly Discovered "Ein-stein" Tessellation Tile
Interfacing Music and Mathematics
Fourier Analysis: It's Not Just for Differential Equations
Joseph Fourier, the Heat Equation and the Age of the Earth
The Ten Most Important Theorems in Mathematics, Part II
The Ten Most Important Theorems in Mathematics, Part I
Surprisingly Better than 50-50
Fascinating Fractals
Approximation by Rationals: A New Focus
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