Par Martin Gardner
Auteur de la rubrique « Jeux mathématiques » de la revue Scientific American pendant vingt-cinq ans, auteur de plus de soixante-dix ouvrages sur des sujets aussi variés que la magie, la philosophie, les jeux mathématiques ou les pseudo-sciences, Martin Gardner a fait le bonheur de nombreux lecteurs par son approche informelle et ludique des mathématiques en particulier et des sciences en général.
Il livre ici un autoportrait touchant de sincérité ainsi qu’un récit de sa vie ponctué par de nombreuses anecdotes.
Livre en anglais.
Descriptif original anglais :
Gardner takes readers from his childhood in Oklahoma to his college days at the University of Chicago, his service in the navy, and his varied and wide-ranging professional pursuits. Before becoming a columnist for Scientific American, he was a caseworker in Chicago during the Great Depression, a reporter for the Tulsa Tribune, an editor for Humpty Dumpty, and a short-story writer for Esquire, among other jobs. Gardner shares colorful anecdotes about the many fascinating people he met and mentored, and voices strong opinions on the subjects that matter to him most, from his love of mathematics to his uncompromising stance against pseudoscience. For Gardner, our mathematically structured universe is undiluted hocus-pocus–a marvelous enigma, in other words.
Undiluted Hocus-Pocus offers a rare, intimate look at Gardner’s life and work, and the experiences that shaped both.