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God Created the Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs That Changed History (2005)

par Stephen Hawking

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Helps the reader understand the progression of mathematical thought, and the very foundations of technologies. This book includes landmark discoveries spanning 2500 years and representing the work of mathematicians such as Euclid, Georg Cantor, Kurt Godel, Augustin Cauchy, Bernard Riemann and Alan Turing.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 9 mentions

Libro dedicado a las grandes obras de la Física y la Astronomía. Stephen Hawking presenta los 31 logros fundamentales del pensamiento matemático, desde la geometría básica hasta la teoría de los números transfinitos ( )
  hernanvillamil | Dec 30, 2019 |
(Original Review, 2005)

Random thoughts while attempting to read the book (the edition is shitty: it's full of typos)

In EM theory, which is Lorentz invariant, there's a relation between the magnitudes of the E and B fields for light (not if you use Planck units. The magnitudes of c and h tell you nothing about physics, but a lot about biology. I don't claim that's original, BTW. I'm trying to recall who said it first, Monod or Schrödinger, E/B = c. That's quite a magnitude difference of the E over the B already. So if you could gradually increase c the structure of a light beam changes radically. But the reason for c is probably tied to quantum vacuum properties so you've got changes there too. In fact I would find it entirely reasonable not to expect invariance in E and/or B while the early universe was trying to sort out its equilibrium conditions during falling out of the gravitational, electromagnetic, weak forces just after the BB.

Why does light (1) have the same speed as gravitational waves (2)? Separate phenomena. The wave equation for 2 is a perfect wave equation with speed c from assuming a weak gravitational field. And that traces all the way back to observationally seeing c the same in all inertial frames for light. The last implies using an (x, ict) description for any motion, not an (x, t) one, i.e. x^2-c^2t^2 = constant. So space-time comes first, where the wave wobble 1 must go at c because of the way we must describe space-time from the previous sentence, and light cannot go faster than this wave at least. Maybe a bit like saying you can't have a faster (light) wave within the gravitational wave. But the assumption/observation of c constant at the very beginning of the model sets the scene for the rest. However, the wave equation for 2 is a weak gravitational field equation, so for strong fields what is the gravitational wave speed since the form of the equation changes? The same? (Answer at the bottom of the post*)

Then there's that light is a quantum thing, E = hv but also E = pc. Where's the gravity in the first equation? The second comes from relativity, so together a wave frequency (v) is connected to space-time via c ... v = pc/h.

While c in vacuum is conventionally regarded as isotopic and isotropic in Einsteinian relativity, it is not really required that it be isotemporal. The value of c was shown to be predictable, even in the 19th century, from first principles, using the permeability and permittivity of the vacuum. It is not at all unreasonable that those values were different, especially during the phase-transition marking the fractionation of the 'forces' in the embryonic space-time manifold. All Einstein's axiom requires is the constancy of c in all (more or less co-temporal) reference frames. It merely happens that that constancy seems to be temporally fixed. But then that may only be due to the fact that the extremely non-linear 'expansion' (whether by Guth's or Magueijo's reckoning of the concept) of the early cosmos vanished billions and billions of years ago.

Bottom-line: The fact that the E and B fields of matter so easily meddle with c should be a red flag. That the E and B values would instantly equilibrate to current values during the cosmos' early phase-change and the differentiation of the fields ought to be questioned.

NB: The editors of this book should burn in hell...

(*) They are the same as a requirement of the two fields' (electromagnetic and gravitational) massless exchange particles. Einstein's c-axiom can be restated as 'there exists a velocity that is measured as constant in all reference frames'. Photons, gravitons, and neutrinos conform to the (essentially) massless parameter and thus conform to this velocity. ( )
  antao | Oct 19, 2018 |
Stephen Hawking is famous for both his expertise in the field of modern physics, and for popularizing the most recent discoveries for the lay audience. He said about his latter books, "For every equation I put in, sales are halved."

This new book is a significant departure from his past design philosophy - he has compiled, edited, and presented some of the great works of mathematical history, with the intent of presenting the lay reader with some of the great and elegant proofs of ages past, from Archimedes to Alan Turing.

There is one glaring flaw - whoever edited the book has made numerous errors - not only typos, but in the actual proofs and formulas and equations themselves! It will be difficult enough for most people to follow these lines of work if they are correct, but some of these mistakes are just nonsensical!

This could be a much better book than it is. I humbly suggest Professor Hawking should switch his Moog synthesizer to a stern voice and give the editors a good dressing down, for mangling the work of his distinguished forebearers. ( )
  HadriantheBlind | Mar 30, 2013 |
Not a proper review, but some notes I made while reading this:

Some reviewers have noted that this book only includes Western mathematicians. That's true, but the discussion of Euclid at least talks about the independent development of some of the principles of geometry and arithmetic in India. (That's about it, though.)

In the Euclid chapter it's unclear to me if the commentary is from Hawking or from a translator.

There's a lot of untranslated Greek, Latin, German...

There's a weird number of exclamation marks in the biography sections. For example "When war broke out in September 1939, Turing left his Cambridge fellowship and immediately reported to the facility the GCCS had established in the small town of Bletcheley Park, the town where the rail line from Oxford to Cambridge intersected the main rail line from London to the north!" OMG!

On the whole I'd skip this and just read the mathematicians' biographies on wikipedia or something. ( )
  tronella | Aug 2, 2011 |
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"We are lucky to live in an age in which we are still making discoveries. It is like the discovery of America -- You only discover it once. The age in which we live in is the age in which we are discovering the fundamental laws of nature..."

-- American Physicist Richard Feynman, spoken in 1964
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Helps the reader understand the progression of mathematical thought, and the very foundations of technologies. This book includes landmark discoveries spanning 2500 years and representing the work of mathematicians such as Euclid, Georg Cantor, Kurt Godel, Augustin Cauchy, Bernard Riemann and Alan Turing.

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