A Numerate Life, John Allen Paulos
A Numerate Life, John Allen Paulos
List: $29.98 | Sale: $20.99
Club: $14.99

A Numerate Life
A Mathematician Explores the Vagaries of Life, His Own and Probably Yours

Author: John Allen Paulos

Narrator: John Allen Paulos

Unabridged: 6 hr 46 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 12/01/2015


Synopsis

Employing intuitive ideas from mathematics, this quirky "meta-memoir" raises questions about our lives that most of us don't think to ask, but arguably should: What part of memory is reliable fact, what part creative embellishment? Which favorite presuppositions are unfounded, which statistically biased? By conjoining two opposing mindsets--the suspension of disbelief required in storytelling and the skepticism inherent in the scientific method--bestselling mathematician John Allen Paulos has created an unusual hybrid, a composite of personal memories and mathematical approaches to re-evaluating them.

Entertaining vignettes from Paulos's biography abound--ranging from a bullying math teacher and a fabulous collection of baseball cards to romantic crushes, a grandmother’s petty larceny, and his quite unintended role in getting George Bush elected president in 2000. These vignettes serve as springboards to many telling perspectives: simple arithmetic puts life-long habits in a dubious new light; higher dimensional geometry helps us see that we're all rather peculiar; nonlinear dynamics explains the narcissism of small differences cascading into very different siblings; logarithms and exponentials yield insight on why we tend to become bored and jaded as we age; and there are tricks and jokes, probability and coincidences, and much more.

For fans of Paulos or newcomers to his work, this witty commentary on his life--and yours--is fascinating listening.

About John Allen Paulos

John Allen Paulos is an author, popular public speaker, and monthly columnist for ABCNews.com and the Guardian. A professor of math at Temple University in Philadelphia, he earned his Ph.D. in the subject from the University of Wisconsin.

His books include the New York Times bestseller Innumeracy; A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper; Once Upon a Number, a Los Angeles Times Best Book of 1998; and A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market. He has also written scholarly papers on probability, logic, and the philosophy of science as well as book reviews and articles in such publications as the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, the Nation, Discover, the American Scholar, and the London Review of Books.

Paulos has appeared frequently on radio and television, including a four-part BBC adaptation of A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper and appearances on the Lehrer News Hour, 20/20, Larry King Live, and Late Show with David Letterman. In 2002 he received the University Creativity Award, and in 2003 the American Association for the Advancement of Science Award for promoting public understanding of science.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Luzie on November 29, 2024

Mathematical musings on the matter of memoirs. Which theoretically sounds great, but unfortunately, the delivery is lacking. The book reads as follows: This thing happened to me, it is connected to this mathematical concept. By the way, this concept is also connected to this thing in human lives. Oh......more

Goodreads review by ☘Misericordia☘ on September 02, 2022

Q: True to my doubts, what I've written is a meta-memoir, even an anti-memoir. Employing ideas from mathematics (quite broadly and non-technically construed) as well as analytic philosophy and related realms, but requiring no special background in mathematics, I've tried to convey some of the concern......more

Goodreads review by Kent on December 21, 2015

"A Numerate Life: A Mathematician Explores the Vagaries of Life, His Own and Probably Yours" by John Paulos, the mathematician is more rumination on the mathematical failings of biography and autobiography rather than anything particularly about Paulos. As a caveat, I'm a little geeky on the math st......more

Goodreads review by Christopher G. on March 14, 2017

Life is a puzzle filled with paradox and contradictions. Trying to make sense of one’s life has been the preoccupation of poets, painters, writers, philosophers and playwrights throughout recorded time. When it comes to a person writing a memoir he or she is selecting a few hundreds pieces and leavi......more

Goodreads review by David on June 03, 2020

Paulos has written several books, and the resultant exposure has exposed him to certain recurrent questions. One of his favorites is, should math students be allowed to use calculators? Short answer: yes. Long answer: the question betrays a completely blinkered view of what math is. Just as literatu......more