How Does One Cut a Triangle? How Does One Cut a Triangle?

How Does One Cut a Triangle‪?‬

    • 32,99 €
    • 32,99 €

Publisher Description

How Does One Cut a Triangle? is a work of art, and rarely, perhaps never, does one find the talents of an artist better suited to his intention than we find in Alexander Soifer and this book.       

—Peter D. Johnson, Jr.


This delightful book considers and solves many problems in dividing triangles into n congruent pieces and also into similar pieces, as well as many extremal problems about placing points in convex figures. The book is primarily meant for clever high school students and college students interested in geometry, but even mature mathematicians will find a lot of new material in it. I very warmly recommend the book and hope the readers will have pleasure in thinking about the unsolved problems and will find new ones.

—Paul Erdös


It is impossible to convey the spirit of the book by merely listing the problems considered or even a number of solutions. The manner of presentation and the gentle guidance toward a solution and hence to generalizations and new problems takes this elementary treatise out of the prosaic and into the stimulating realm of mathematical creativity. Not only young talented people but dedicated secondary teachers and even a few mathematical sophisticates will find this reading both pleasant and profitable.

—L.M. Kelly

Mathematical Reviews


[How Does One Cut a Triangle?] reads like an adventure story. In fact, it is an adventure story, complete with interesting characters, moments of exhilaration, examples of serendipity, and unanswered questions. It conveys the spirit of mathematical discovery and it celebrates the event as have mathematicians throughout history.

—Cecil Rousseau


The beginner, who is interested in the book, not only comprehends a situation in a creative mathematical studio, not only is exposed to good mathematical taste, but also acquires elements of modern mathematical culture. And (not less important) the reader imagines the role and place of intuition and analogy in mathematical investigation; he or she fancies the meaning of generalization in modern mathematics and surprising connections between different parts of this science (that are, as one might think, far from each other) that unite them.

—V.G. Boltyanski

SIAM Review


Alexander Soifer is a wonderful problem solver and inspiring teacher. His book will tell young mathematicians what mathematics should be like, and remind older ones who may be in danger of forgetting.

—John Baylis

The Mathematical Gazette

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2009
25 August
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
204
Pages
PUBLISHER
Springer New York
SIZE
1.5
MB

More Books by Alexander Soifer

The New Mathematical Coloring Book The New Mathematical Coloring Book
2024
Competitions for Young Mathematicians Competitions for Young Mathematicians
2017
The Colorado Mathematical Olympiad: The Third Decade and Further Explorations The Colorado Mathematical Olympiad: The Third Decade and Further Explorations
2017
The Scholar and the State: In Search of Van der Waerden The Scholar and the State: In Search of Van der Waerden
2014
Geometric Etudes in Combinatorial Mathematics Geometric Etudes in Combinatorial Mathematics
2010
The Colorado Mathematical Olympiad and Further Explorations The Colorado Mathematical Olympiad and Further Explorations
2011