Once upon a number
the hidden mathematical logic of stories
1st ed.
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Author
Publication
1998 - Basic Books, New York, NY, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
53,500 words, Guess
Page Count
214 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL377255M
- ISBN-100465051588
- OCLC Control Number39700629
- OCLC Control Numberonceuponnumberhi00paul
- Library of Congress Control Number98039252
and 2 more
- LibraryThing2015321
- Goodreads1783616
Classifications
- DDC519.5
- LCCQA276 .P285 1998
Description
"Once Upon a Number shows that stories and numbers aren't as different as you might imagine, and in fact they have surprising and fascinating connections. The concepts of logic and probability both grew out of intuitive ideas about how certain stories would play out. Now, logicians are inventing ways to deal with real world situations by mathematical means - by acknowledging, for instance, that items that are mathematically interchangeable may not be interchangeable in a story. And complexity theory looks at both number strings and narrative strings in remarkably similar terms."--BOOK JACKET. "Beside lucid accounts of cutting-edge information theory we get hilarious anecdotes and jokes; instructions for running a truly impressive pyramid scam as well as a new religious hoax; a freewheeling conversation between Groucho Marx and Bertrand Russell; explanations of why the mundane facts of the O. J. Simpson case are overwhelmingly incriminating; how the Unabomber's thinking shows signs of mathematical training; why we're much more likely to feel aggrieved than aggrieving; and dozens of other treats."--BOOK JACKET.
First Sentence
STORIES AND STATISTICS?
Subjects
Other Editions
- Once upon a number: the hidden mathematical logic of stories
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