The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: The Story of Paul Erdós and the Search for Mathematical Truth: Odd Story of Paul Erdos, Mathematical Monk, and the Search for Truth - Softcover

Hoffman, Paul

 
9781857028119: The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: The Story of Paul Erdós and the Search for Mathematical Truth: Odd Story of Paul Erdos, Mathematical Monk, and the Search for Truth

Inhaltsangabe

A biography of a mathematical genius. Paul Erdos was the most prolific pure mathematician in history and, arguably, the strangest too.

In The Man Who Loved Only Numbers Paul Hoffman, former Editor-in-Chief of Discover magazine, describes the life of Paul Erdos, Hungarian mathematical genius. Born in 1913 in Budapest, Erdos was born the very day his two sisters died of scarlet fever. His mother, fearing childhood contagion, refused her son conventional schooling. Home alone, Erdos did mental arithmetic. At three he could multiply three digit numbers in his head. At four he began looking for patterns amongst the prime integers. It was the start of a life consumed by mathematics. For six decades Erdos had no job, no hobbies, no wife, no home; he never learnt to cook, do laundry, drive a car and died a virgin. Instead he travelled the world with his mother in tow, arriving at the doorstep of esteemed mathematicians declaring ‘My brain is open’. He travelled until his death at 83, racing across four continents to prove as many theorems as possible, fuelled by a diet of espresso and amphetamines. With more than 1,500 papers written or co-written, a daily routine of 19 hours of mathematics a day, seven days a week, Paul Erdos was one of the most extrordinary thinkers of our times.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Paul Hoffman is publisher of Encyclopaeida Brittanica and the science correspondent for The Newshour with John Lehrer on US TV.

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