The Math Gene: How Mathematical Thinking Evolved And Why Numbers Are Like Gossip by Keith Devlin

The Math Gene: How Mathematical Thinking Evolved And Why Numbers Are Like Gossip

Keith Devlin
352 pages
Basic Books
Aug 2000
Hardcover
Foreign Languages WSBN
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If people are endowed with a "number instinct" similar to the "language instinct" -- as recent research suggests -- then why can't everyone do math? In The Math Gene, mathematician and popular writer Keith Devlin attacks both sides of this question. Devlin offers a breathtakingly new theory of language development that describes how language evolved in two stages and how its main purpose was not communication. Devlin goes on to show that the ability to think mathematically arose out of the same symbol-manipulating ability that was so crucial to the very first emergence of true language. Why, then, can't we do math as well as we speak? The answer, says Devlin, is that we can and do -- we just don't recognize when we're using mathematical reasoning.
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About this book
Pages 352
Publisher Basic Books
Published 2000
Readers 1