Chapter 0: Null and Void
Chapter 1: Nothing Doing: The Origin of Zero
Chapter 2: Nothing Comes of Nothing: The West Rejects Zero
Chapter 3: Nothing Ventured: Zero Goes East
Chapter 4: The Infinite God of Nothing: The Theology of Zero
Chapter 5: Infinite Zeroes and Infidel Mathematicians: Zero and the
Scientific Revolution
Chapter 6: Infinity's Twin: The Infinite Nature of Zero
Chapter 7: Absolute Zeroes: The Physics of Zero
Chapter 8: Zero Hour at Ground Zero: Zero at the Edge of Space and
Time
Chapter Infinity: Zero's Final Victory: End Time
Appendix A: Animal, Vegetable, or Minister?
Appendix B: The Golden Ratio
Appendix C: The Modern Definition of a Derivative
Appendix D: Cantor Enumerats the Rational Numbers
Appendix E: Make Your Own Wormhole Time Machine
Selected Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Charles Seife is the author of five previous books, including Proofiness and Virtual Unreality. He has written for a wide variety of publications, including The New York Times, Wired, New Scientist, Science, Scientific American, and The Economist. He is a professor of journalism at New York University and lives in New York City.
“Mathematicians, contrary to popular misconception, are often the
most lucid of writers (Bertrand Russell won a Nobel Prize not in
mathematics but in literature), and Seife is a welcome example. He
writes with an understated charm that takes account of human fear,
the mistakes of geniuses and the mind’s grandest ambitions.”
—Atlanta Journal Constitution
“Zero emerges as a daunting intellectual riddle in this fascinating
chronicle. With remarkable economy, Seife urges his readers to peer
through the zero down into the abyss of absolute emptiness and out
into the infinite expanse of space. . . . Deftly and
surely, Seife recounts the historical debates, then swiftly rolls
the zero right up to the present day, where he plunges through its
perilous opening down into the voracious maw of a black hole, and
then out into the deep freeze of an ever cooling cosmos. A must
read for every armchair physicist.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“His narrative . . . shifts smoothly from history
and philosophy to science and technology, and his prose displays a
gift for making complex ideas clear.”
—The Dallas Morning News
“Seife keeps the tone as light as his subject matter is deep. By
book’s end, no reader will dispute Seife’s claim that zero is among
the most fertile—and therefore most dangerous—ideas that humanity
has devised. . . . Seife’s prose provides readers
who struggled through math and science courses a clear window for
seeing both the powerful techniques of calculus and the conundrums
of modern physics. . . . In doing
so . . . this entertaining and enlightening book
reveals one of the roots of humanity’s deepest uncertainties and
greatest insights.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Even innumerates . . . can appreciate the intricate
web of conceptual connections Seife illuminates.”
—Boston Globe
“The greater part of this book tells a fascinating human story with
skill and wit . . . we come to appreciate the
surprising depth and richness of ‘simple’ concepts such as zero and
infinity—and their remarkable links to the religion and culture of
earlier civilizations and to present-day science.”
—The Philadelphia Inquirer
“Seife . . . recounts his story as an accomplished
science journalist, standing on the outside to bring clarity to
complex ideas. . . . the crisp explanations are
refreshing . . . straightforward and bright.”
—The New York Times
“Seife has a talent for making the most ball-busting of modern
theories . . . seem fairly lucid and common
sensical.”
—Salon
This is a very light treatment of big ideas. In the first chapters, Seife, a correspondent for New Scientist, skims over the historical and intellectual development of zero, covered more thoughtfully in Robert Kaplan's The Nothing That Is: A Natural History of Zero (LJ 10/1/99). Seife then stresses the connections between zero and infinity and explains calculus, quantum mechanics, relativity, the Big Bang, and string theory to show that they depend on zero and infinity. This is much too much ground to cover when the reader is assumed not to know basic algebra, and the book's central claim becomes very weak, not saying much more than that string theory requires the system of modern mathematics. The prose style reflects Seife's occupation as a science journalist: fast-paced and colorful but repetitious, oversimplified, and exaggerated ("Not only does zero hold the secret to our existence, it will also be responsible for the end of the universe"). Recommended for larger public libraries, while smaller libraries on a budget should acquire Kaplan's book. [BOMC selection.]--Kristine Fowler, Mathematics Lib., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
"Mathematicians, contrary to popular misconception, are often the
most lucid of writers (Bertrand Russell won a Nobel Prize not in
mathematics but in literature), and Seife is a welcome example. He
writes with an understated charm that takes account of human fear,
the mistakes of geniuses and the mind's grandest ambitions."
-Atlanta Journal Constitution
"Zero emerges as a daunting intellectual riddle in this fascinating
chronicle. With remarkable economy, Seife urges his readers to peer
through the zero down into the abyss of absolute emptiness and out
into the infinite expanse of space. . . . Deftly and surely, Seife
recounts the historical debates, then swiftly rolls the zero right
up to the present day, where he plunges through its perilous
opening down into the voracious maw of a black hole, and then out
into the deep freeze of an ever cooling cosmos. A must read for
every armchair physicist."
-Booklist (starred review)
"His narrative . . . shifts smoothly from history and philosophy to
science and technology, and his prose displays a gift for making
complex ideas clear."
-The Dallas Morning News
"Seife keeps the tone as light as his subject matter is deep. By
book's end, no reader will dispute Seife's claim that zero is among
the most fertile-and therefore most dangerous-ideas that humanity
has devised. . . . Seife's prose provides readers who struggled
through math and science courses a clear window for seeing both the
powerful techniques of calculus and the conundrums of modern
physics. . . . In doing so . . . this entertaining and enlightening
book reveals one of the roots of humanity's deepest uncertainties
and greatest insights."
-Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Even innumerates . . . can appreciate the intricate web of
conceptual connections Seife illuminates."
-Boston Globe
"The greater part of this book tells a fascinating human story with
skill and wit . . . we come to appreciate the surprising depth and
richness of 'simple' concepts such as zero and infinity-and their
remarkable links to the religion and culture of earlier
civilizations and to present-day science."
-The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Seife . . . recounts his story as an accomplished science
journalist, standing on the outside to bring clarity to complex
ideas. . . . the crisp explanations are refreshing . . .
straightforward and bright."
-The New York Times
"Seife has a talent for making the most ball-busting of modern
theories . . . seem fairly lucid and common sensical."
-Salon
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