Get this product faster from our US warehouse
-Alfred S. Posamentier, author of The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers -Posamentier, June 2007
Numbers at Work is really a sort of modern cabinet of curiosities collected from the mathematical world... in the best sense: Taschner has created a collection of interesting and wonderful facts which illustrate how mathematics is involved in many areas of human endeavor. Reading such a book leaves one with two feelings: the world is full of marvels, and human intelligence is also a marvelous thing...the text is lively and easily comprehensible by non-specialits. -MAA, August 2007
A fascinating reading on the history and use of numbers. A deeper background in mathematics is not necessary in order to read, enjoy and learn from this book. Recommended to all readers interested in the world around us and wanting to understand the importance of numbers in our daily lives. -EMS, September 2007
As a mathematician with interests in history, I did not expect to learn a great deal from such a popularisation, but was pleasantly surprised to have my expectations dashed. There are many gems to be found in this book that I have not seen elsewhere, and we owe a great deal to the formidable erudition of Professor Taschner. -Phill Shultz, Gazette of the Australian Mathematical Society, November 2007
Pythagoras, Bach, Hofmannsthal, Descartes, Leibniz, Laplace, Bohr, Pascal - ... a discursive journey along a thread of ideas crossing temporal and geographical boundaries and ranging over philosophy, art and science. -Mathematiacl Reviews, January 2008
All that is required is an interest in the world around us and a desire to understand the impact and influence that numbers have, both historically and in our daily lives. -L'Enseignement Mathematique, July 2007
Taschner is a gifted writer, and his book is accessible to a broad audience. ... I highly recommend this book as an interesting, comprehensive reference for students as well as preservice and in-service educators. The relevant applications of numbers discussed here can serve as a means of motivating even the most reluctant learner to study numbers. -Cathleen M. Zucco-Teveloff, Mathematics Teacher, August 2008
A superb text that appeals to a very wide audience, it illuminates the multifaceted nature of mathematics and emphasizes its deepest links with cultural, historical, spiritual, ideological, and scientific evolution of our society. -Zentralblatt MATH, February 2009