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The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics
Posted By :
math007
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Date :
08 Nov 2007 14:08:00
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Comments :
1
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Stanislas Dehaene, "The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics"
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA | Pages: 288 | ISBN:0195132408 | PDF | 15.3 MB
This may surprise those who have trouble carrying the remainder in division or figuring out a 15 percent tip on a $20 lunch bill, but according to mathematician and psychologist Stanislas Dehaene, mathematics is an inborn skill. In The Number Sense, Dehaene makes a compelling case for the human mind's innate grasp of mathematics. Take, for example, the fact that place value systems (such as the Arabic numeral system we use) arose independently in four separate civilizations--evidence of a universal sense of number. Dehaene's book is filled with examples to support his thesis, from young babies' ability to "count" (i.e., to react when single objects are replaced by two or more) to examples of how brain damage affects various individuals' number sense. Even more fascinating is his discussion of the relationship between language and numbers. Though Dehaene's book is about mathematics, even those readers with the worst math anxiety will find The Number Sense an intriguing exploration of the world of numbers--and the human mind.
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Posted By:
maxand
Date:
12 Nov 2007 14:05:56
Thanks guys for posting this book, published in 1999. It has received outstanding reviews from Amazon customers.
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