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100 Essential Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know: Math Explains Your World

Front Cover
28 Reviews
W. W. Norton & Company, May 18, 2009 - Mathematics - 284 pages
Mathematics can reveal and illuminate things about the complex world we live in that can't be found any other way. In this informative and entertaining book, John D. Barrow takes the most perplexing of everyday phenomena--from the odds of winning the lottery and the method of determining batting averages to the shapes of roller coasters and the reasoning behind the fairest possible divorce settlements--and explains why things work the way they do. With elementary math and accompanying illustrations, he sheds light on the mysterious corners of the world we encounter every day. Have you ever considered why you always seem to get stuck in the longest line? Why two's company but three's a crowd? Or why there are six degrees of separation instead of seven? This clever little book has all the answers to these puzzling, everyday questions of existence that need not perplex us any more.--From publisher description.
  

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Review: 100 Essential Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know

User Review  - Jerry Smith - Goodreads

As a dedicated math hater and one who finds mathematical expressions of anything confusing and frustrating, I thought this might be a good book for me. It is quite fun and there are several items of ... Read full review

Review: One Hundred Essential Things You Didn't Know You Didn't Know: Math Explains Your World

User Review  - Peter - Goodreads

This is a neat little nonfiction book, easy to read in short snippets (which of course is why I read it straight through - no, seriously, it's less tiring than one great big book). I'd heard many of ... Read full review

All 28 reviews »

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Selected pages

Contents

Twos Company Threes a Crowd
1
Its a Small World After All
4
Monkey Business
7
Independence Day
10
Rugby and Relativity
12
Wagons Roll
14
A Sense of Proportion
16
Why Does the Other Queue Always Move Faster?
19
Walk Please Dont Run
146
Mindreading Tricks
148
The Planet of the Deceivers
150
How to Win the Lottery
152
A Truly Weird Football Match
155
An Arch Problem
157
Counting in Eights
159
Getting a Mandate
161

Pylon of the Month
21
A Sense of Balance
24
Bridging That Gap
26
On the Cards
30
Tally Ho
34
Relationships
37
Racing Certainties
40
High Jumping
43
Superficiality
47
VAT in Eternity
50
Living in a Simulation
52
Emergence
56
How to Push a Car
59
Positive Feedback
62
The Drunkards Walk
64
Faking It
66
The Flaw of Averages
69
The Origami of the Universe
71
Easy and Hard Problems
73
Is This a Record?
76
A DoItYourself Lottery
79
I Do Not Believe It
81
Flash Fires
83
The Secretary Problem
86
Fair Divorce Settlements the WinWin Solution
90
Many Happy Returns
93
Tilting at Windmills
96
Verbal Conjuring
99
Financial Investment with Time Travellers
101
A Thought for Your Pennies
104
Breaking the Law of Averages
107
How Long are Things Likely to Survive?
109
A President who Preferred the Triangle to the Pentagon
112
Secret Codes in Your Pocket
116
Ive Got a Terrible Memory for Names
120
Calculus Makes You Live Longer
122
Getting in a Flap
124
Your Numbers Up
127
Double Your Money
129
Some Reflections on Faces
131
The Most Infamous Mathematician
135
Roller Coasters and Motorway Junctions
139
A Taylormade Explosion
143
The Twoheaded League
164
Creating Something out of Nothing
166
How to Rig an Election
169
The Swing of the Pendulum
172
A Bike with Square Wheels
174
How Many Guards Does an Art Gallery Need?
176
and What About a Prison?
181
A Snooker Trick Shot
183
Brothers and Sisters
186
Playing Fair with a Biased Coin
189
The Wonders of Tautology
191
What a Racket
193
Packing Your Stuff
197
Sent Packing Again
199
Crouching Tiger
204
How the Leopard Got His Spots
207
The Madness of Crowds
209
Diamond Geezer
212
The Three Laws of Robotics
216
Thinking Outside the Box
219
Googling in the Caribbean The Power of the Matrix
222
Loss Aversion
226
The Lead in Your Pencil
228
Testing Spaghetti to Destruction
230
The Gherkin
232
Being Mean with the Price Index
235
Omniscience can be a Liability
238
Why People arent Cleverer
240
The Man from Underground
242
There are No Uninteresting Numbers
244
Incognito
246
The Ice Skating Paradox
249
The Rule of Two
252
Segregation and Micromotives
254
Not Going with the Flow
256
Venn Vill They Ever Learn
258
Some Benefits of Irrationality
261
Strange Formulae
266
Chaos
270
All Aboard
273
The Global Village
276
Notes
279
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About the author (2009)

John D. Barrow is a professor of mathematical sciences and director of the Millennium Mathematics Project at Cambridge University and a Fellow of the Royal Society. He lives in Cambridge, UK.

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