Michael Brooks is a science writer with a PhD in quantum physics, and the author of several books, including the bestselling 13 Things That Don’t Make Sense and The Quantum Astrologer’s Handbook, a Daily Telegraph Book of the Year.
‘At school, many of us wondered about the point of geometry,
calculus, and algebra. Brooks shows how the childhood question
“What’s the point of this?” can be reframed: esoteric concepts such
as imaginary numbers, cryptography, and the semi-mystical digits of
pi are revealed to be the essential building blocks of the 21st
century.’
*New Scientist*
‘An alternative textbook that suggests a new way of thinking about
maths, and a more congenial way of teaching it — as not simply an
abstract science but as a cultural achievement, an indelible and
indispensable part of human history.’
*New Statesman*
‘How brilliant of Michael Brooks to be able to reignite my
almost-forgotten childhood love of mathematics. Written with
beauty, style, and care for the history as well as for the science.
A tour de force.’
*Angela Saini, author of Superior: the return of race
science*
‘Michael Brooks has written the formula that reduces to near zero
any sense that maths could be a dull subject to study. [The Maths
That Made Us] brings to life in accessible, lively terms how maths
helps us navigate pandemics, space travel, and encrypted apps — all
while celebrating the complicated and fascinating characters, from
Euclid to Florence Nightingale, who have pushed our knowledge
forward. Why isn’t school maths taught like this?’
*David Rowan, founding editor-in-chief of WIRED UK and
author of Non-Bullshit Innovation*
‘In this thrilling, colourful, and deeply researched book, Michael
Brooks tells the epic story of how mathematics has driven human
progress, spanning millennia to trace the numerical innovations —
from geometry and algebra to the mind-bending landscapes of
imaginary numbers and extra dimensions — that have woven our
history and shape our lives today. Along the way, he explores the
passions and intrigues of the people behind the numbers,
transforming mathematics from dry equations into a gripping drama.
This is maths as you’ve never experienced it: inspiring, fun, and
utterly human.’
*Jo Marchant, author of The Human Cosmos*
‘Michael Brooks has a rare gift for making science come to life,
and in this book he is at his best, fusing mathematics with
storytelling as he takes us on an exhilarating sweep through human
history. [The Maths That Made Us] shows just how deeply numbers
have propelled the advance of civilisation. And it does so with
enormous narrative brio and good cheer. This is a serious — but
seriously readable — history which I enjoyed from the first page to
the last.’
*Dan Jones, New York Times bestselling historian*
‘A friendly, readable account of the huge influence that
mathematics has had on human civilisation. If you’ve ever wondered
what the maths you did at school was for, and what it has done for
us, you’ll find the answer here. Michael Brooks’s enthusiasm for
the beauty and utility of the subject shines from every page.’
*Ian Stewart, author of What’s the Use?*
‘From Fermat’s last theorem to quantum computers, pi to
probability, slides rules to golden ratios, [The Maths That Made
Us] is no mere bluffer’s guide, but a rich introduction to the
elegance and importance of mathematics. Michael Brooks shows what a
global and multicultural task it has been, ever since prehistory,
to figure out how we can benefit from quantification and
calculation. He shows that maths is not just, as Eugene Wigner
said, unreasonably effective for understanding the world, but also
unfathomably wonderful in its own right.’
*Philip Ball, science writer and author of Beyond
Weird*
‘Suddenly it all makes sense. This brilliant book shows maths as
something concrete, real, and crucial to our lives, rather than
some dry, abstract code designed to make school kids’ lives
miserable.’
*Charlie Higson, actor, comedian, and author of the Enemy
series*
‘Michael Brooks has written both a lively history of civilisation,
and a delightful introduction to the power of mathematics. Either
would be an achievement, but to do both simultaneously is a
wonder.’
*Tim Harford, author of How To Make the World Add Up*
‘If you love maths, you’ll enjoy this book. But if you’re a little
scared of maths (as I am), you’ll adore [The Maths That Made Us].
Michael Brooks knows how to tell the hidden stories behind numbers,
formulas, and logarithms.’
*Andrea Wulf, author of The Invention of Nature*
‘Mathematics is quite unique in that even much earlier results do
not change with the passing of time. This book is not only a
passionate love letter to mathematics, it offers an important
lesson in the appreciation of mathematics, and of its crucial role
in humanity’s history.’
*Mario Livio, astrophysicist, and author of Galileo and
The Science Deniers*
‘A more or less chronological history and compelling case that
advances in mathematics provided the foundation for the advance of
civilisation … An unabashed lover of mathematics, Brooks refuses to
take the traditional pop writer’s pledge to eschew equations. Most
readers will follow his description of ancient navigation across
the Mediterranean and the birth of linear perspective in
Renaissance Italy, but when he turns his attention to calculus,
logarithms, statistics, and cryptography, there is no shortage of
complex equation … Not a mathematics-is-fun romp but a serious,
persuasive effort to describe how its discoveries paralleled human
progress.’
*Kirkus Reviews*
‘An enviably good history of how ideas in mathematics have shaped
(and been shaped by) the progress of civilisation.’
*Tim Harford, author of How To Make the World Add Up*
‘What is the driving force behind the development of human
civilisation? In this unique and surprising book, Michael Brooks
makes the case that it is the growth and progress of mathematics —
and he does it in a way that will be interesting to the
mathematical and math-phobic alike! As entertaining as it is
informative, [The Maths That Made Us] takes us on a journey through
the ages, demonstrating how mathematics played a crucial role in
the evolution of how we live. Not since Jared Diamond’s Guns,
Germs, and Steel has there been such an insightful and compelling
analysis of how we got here.’
*Leonard Mlodinow, New York Times bestselling author of
The Drunkard’s Walk*
‘Moving from ancient Egyptian priests to a hobbyist who solved a
mapmaking puzzle that confounded NASA and the US Geological Survey,
science writer Brooks aims to persuade readers that mathematics was
one of the great innovations that made civilisation happen.’
*Library Journal*
‘He begins by diligently explaining the basics of algebra,
arithmetic, calculus, and geometry, and introducing key figures in
math’s history … Brooks uses the work of these thinkers to break
down the math behind facets of everyday life: he describes the
statistics that underlie life expectancies; the equations that
allow scientists to understand the cosmos; and the imaginary
numbers that give guitar amplifiers their power … It’s a
show-stopping paean to the wonder of numbers.’
*Publishers Weekly, starred review*
‘Ambitious.’
*New Statesman*
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