The Last Recreations: Hydras, Eggs, and Other Mathematical Mystifications

Front Cover
Springer Science & Business Media, Feb 28, 2007 - Mathematics - 392 pages
Of all of Martin Gardner's writings, none gained him a wider audience or was more central to his reputation than his Mathematical Recreations column in "Scientific American", which virtually defined the genre of popular mathematics writing for a generation. Flatland, Hydras and Eggs: Mathematical Mystifications will be the final collection of these columns, covering a period roughly from 1979 to Gardner's retirement as a regular columnist in 1986. The notable trend over Gardner's career is the increasing sophistication of the mathematics he has been able to translate into his famously lucid prose. These columns show him at the top of his form and are not to be missed by anyone with an interest in mathematics. As always in his published collections, Gardner includes letters received from mathematicians and other commenting on the ideas presented in the columns.
 

Contents

Checker Recreations Part I
207
Checker Recreations Part II
221
Modulo Arithmetic and Hummers Wicked Witch
233
Lavinia Seeks a Room and Other Problems
247
The Symmetry Creations of Scott Kim
267
Parabolas
285
NonEuclidean Geometry
303
Voting Mathematics
317
A Toroidal Paradox and Other Problems
331
Minimal Steiner Trees
345
Trivalent Graphs Snarks and Boojums
361
Index
381
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

References to this book

About the author (2007)

Martin Gardner is the author of more than seventy books on a vast range of topics including "Did Adam & Eve Have Navels?", "Calculus Made Easy", & "The Annotated Alice". He lives in Hendersonville, North Carolina.

Bibliographic information